The Cubs are really good at ABS challenges

I had it in my mind to write this article a day or so ago after hearing the rankings of MLB teams on successful ABS challenges.

So you’ll forgive me for writing it the day after the Cubs failed on two of three challenges in their loss to the Padres, including one by Matthew Boyd in the first inning, that he later said he shouldn’t have made.

Here is that challenge [VIDEO].

Yeah, that’s a bad one. Not only because it was pretty clearly a ball, but that’s only the fourth pitch of the game! Perhaps a bit rattled, Boyd wound up walking Ramon Laureano, helping trigger a three-run Padres inning.

But in general, the Cubs have done well in ABS challenges. A new site called Tap to Challenge has taken data that’s been made available by Baseball Savant and sliced and diced it in a number of ways.

This chart shows the Cubs as the sixth-best team overall in challenges at a 60.3 percent success rate (through Monday’s games), just behind the Tigers at 60.4 percent and Mariners at 60.6 percent. The Royals top the leaderboard at 62.3 percent.

Breaking this down further, Cubs batters rank 17th at 46.2 percent (the D-backs lead at 52.6 percent) and Cubs catchers rank second with a 73.3 percent success rate (the Tigers lead at 85 percent).

Just 41 challenges have been made by pitchers, with 17 being successful (41.4 percent). Boyd’s challenge was the second made by a Cubs pitcher so far this year. The other, which was successful, was by Edward Cabrera on April 11 against the Pirates [VIDEO].

The most challenges by a team’s pitchers is five, by the Yankees. Yankees pitchers have been correct three times. Eight teams (Twins, Royals, Padres, Reds, Blue Jays, Rays, Diamondbacks and Brewers) have not had any challenges by pitchers, and in general, teams are telling pitchers not to challenge. The 41 pitcher challenges are just 2.3 percent of the total of 1,767 challenges made in total by all players.

There’s been some discussion here about whether MLB should eventually go to a full ABS system. Personally, I like the challenge system. It creates some strategy — obviously, losing a challenge in the first inning and both challenges by the third hurt the Cubs Monday night. It gets fans involved, you’ve certainly heard the cheering by home fans when their player is correct.

Last week at The Athletic, Jayson Stark wrote an article that detailed more of the things I’ve mentioned here, headlined “When will MLB go ‘full ABS,’ let robot umps take over? Maybe never.” I know that’s going to make some of you unhappy, but here’s some of the reasoning:

Do we really want ABS to tell us whether 700,000 pitches a year are balls and strikes? That’s a momentous question because it would be such a momentous change.

“You should only make changes if it makes the game better,” former Cubs/Red Sox/MLB rules visionary Theo Epstein said, as far back as 2023, in an appearance on the Starkville podcast with me and my co-host, Doug Glanville. “You have to figure out exactly what you’re solving for. With ABS, you don’t want to force a solution without a problem.”

Theo is correct, in my view. What if MLB went to a system like this, with umpires no longer used to calling balls and strikes, and the technology went down? Then you’re asking for trouble, in asking people who wouldn’t be doing this important thing to suddenly have to do it accurately.

The article says that for a time in 2023 and 2024, they experimented with full ABS in Triple-A, then surveyed players and fans on the system. The results might surprise you:

Check out the results from this survey, conducted in August 2024. Players and coaches were asked: Which ABS format do you prefer? You might want to look away because “full ABS” is about to take a hellacious drubbing.

Challenge system — 54 percent
Full ABS — 8 percent
Human umps — 38 percent

(Source: Major League Baseball)

Eight percent? They were being offered a chance to get every call right, and not even one in 10 wanted that? I think they were trying to tell us something.

Fans in Triple A weren’t quite that vociferous. But it was still more than a 2-to-1 runaway win for the challenge system over full ABS.

Challenge system — 47 percent
Full ABS — 23 percent
Human umps 30 percent

(Source: Major League Baseball)

Personally, I think that as the challenge system in MLB gets better because players get better at it, the percentage answering “human umps” in a survey like that would get smaller. And don’t take it only from me, take it from a former player who’s now a Triple-A manager:

Take it from Morgan Ensberg, manager of the Rays’ Triple-A Durham team. He lived through more than 100 games of the full-robot experience. He described those games as having “no color, no spirit.”

“It’s just weird, man,” said Ensberg, a longtime challenge-system fan. “Like, a robotic voice is saying, strike or ball, and you’re going to have problems with that, because you kind of want humans. You know, we all have our brains. And you want to have humans hitting, and humans pitching, and humans calling the games, because we’re going to see things more similarly.”

So that is the “human element” you want. Humans playing and calling the plays, with the technology backing them up. I think that’s a good match. And also, remember this:

Is ABS improving the game?

The answer, from fans who attended games between March 26 and April 19:

Yes — 92 percent
No — 8 percent

(Source: Major League Baseball)

We eagerly await the results of independent polling on this topic. But if you’ve spent even one night in a big-league ballpark during the past few weeks, it couldn’t be more obvious. The buzz that accompanies every challenge cartoon on the scoreboard is telling us that the people paying to sit in those seats are gobbling up this stuff.

“I think that one of the virtues of baseball is, we have things that we can argue about in a bar as we’re watching a game,” the same official said. “So one of the things that makes ABS challenge interesting is, you’re sitting there and it’s a 3-2 count, and a guy gets rung up on a called strike in the third inning with a runner on second. And you say: ‘Why the hell didn’t he challenge?’ I think that’s an interesting aspect of the game.”

Remember: If you let those robot umps call every pitch, you lose all of that.

Because in the end, baseball is entertainment. And in my view, the challenge system definitely provides entertainment.

Stark’s article concludes with some thoughts about where the system might go from here. Maybe you add a third challenge, he cites an unnamed baseball executive, and I could see that happening. The whole article is definitely worth reading, if you haven’t seen it yet.

One last thing and then I’ll let you have at it. Going back to the charts from Tap To Challenge (a fantastic site worth your time), the site also has data on umpires. That’s also worth a look — you’ll find that quite a few umpires have been overturned more than CB Bucknor. Baseball Savant also has quite a bit of ABS data you can peruse.

So, who on the Yankees is allowed to challenge balls and strikes?

ST. PETERSBURG, FL - APRIL 10: A general view of the video board during a ABS challenge against Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 of the New York Yankees in the fourth inning during the game between the New York Yankees and the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on Friday, April 10, 2026 in St. Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Mary Holt/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

I’m writing this before the Yankees take on the Rangers Monday night, so it’s subject to change, but at this moment Jazz Chisholm Jr. is the worst player in baseball when it comes to the ABS challenge system. His 14 percent success rate is the lowest in the sport, and this weekend against the Astros we saw two dreadful examples.

The first one annoyed me — it’s an eight-run game in the ninth inning, this is about as close to stat-padding as you get in baseball. The second failed challenge is somewhat offset by the fact that Jazz notched a single a couple of pitches later, but challenges are limited; once you fail you can’t use it again. Chisholm took away a potential review from another player on a call that wasn’t close.

I think Jazz is a pretty good player but it is perhaps time to concede that a guy with a near-20 percent career K-BB rate doesn’t have a great understanding of the zone. Chisholm makes his money by getting his A-swing off and hitting the ball into the gap, not by owning the strike zone the way a Juan Soto-type would. Suffice it to say, Jazz doesn’t get to challenge except in the most obvious of circumstances.

Chisholm isn’t the only guy that’s hurting the team on the review side of things though. The Yankees sit a tick below league average (47 percent) at hitter-induced challenges at 44 percent, and bang on league average on fielder-induced at 59 percent. For a team that has preached strike zone ownership for about as long as I’ve been alive, they’re sure not making any gains in this part of the game.

Four players have been a net positive in the challenge system, with Aaron Judge of course leading the way. The Yankee captain is 3-for-4 with reviews this year, and you could argue that the three-time MVP has been more cautious than he should be. Then again, he has won three MVPs without the challenge system, so while I’m sure he has the greenlight to review any pitch he deems necessary, it might just end up not being a part of his game.

Ryan McMahon and Trent Grisham have gone a combined 5-for-7 so far this year, and if Aaron Judge has a big, emerald-green flag, they have something that’s slightly paler but still very clearly a go. In general, I think challenges should be reserved for times there are men on base, the first pitch of the at-bat, or a potential final pitch. McMahon and Grisham can go outside that band slightly, but not wildly.

Then we have a middle grouping, of guys that have been neutral to slightly bad — the yellow lights. This includes Paul Goldschmidt, Giancarlo Stanton, and José Caballero, the latter of which has called for 10 reviews, the most on the team. I tend to think that Cabby does this as a bit of gamesmanship, in the same way that he refuses to engage the pitcher until the eight-second required mark. Still, these three guys have to sit within tight parameters like discussed above, but as long as they stick to ‘em, they can tap their helmets.

Then there’s the dunce caps. Ben Rice, Austin Wells, Cody Bellinger, and Chisholm have actively cost the team runs with their challenge attempts. They’ve combined to go 3-for-13, which would be a pretty cold weekend series at the plate, and is even worse off when it comes to challenging balls and strikes. For now, unless there’s a deeply egregious call or the entire game can change on the result — a Rob Refsnyder-esque situation — these guys should focus on getting the bat on the ball more than anything else.

Bright Spots The Kings Could Build On From A Disappointing First-Round Playoff Series

The Los Angeles Kings are just a couple of days removed from a disappointing 4-0 first-round series defeat to the Colorado Avalanche in the Stanley Cup playoffs. But it's a good time to reflect on what transpired in the Kings' post-season, and what they can build from.

Though they lost every game, there are some bright spots to take from this series, even if it was the team's fifth-straight exit in the opening round of the playoffs.

So, now that the Kings' off-season is officially underway, let's look back at the positives from these playoffs.

Anton Forsberg

Kings goaltender Anton Forsberg was a revelation for the team, not only in the post-season, but in the final stretch of the regular season and ultimately helped push Los Angeles into the playoffs.

The recent play of Forsberg tells the organization that they have another veteran netminder who can be relied on. Los Angeles' tandem plans changed alongside Darcy Kuemper, who has been the starter for most of his Kings career before this Forsberg streak.

The Swede gave the Kings a chance to win in the playoffs, especially in Game 1 and 2. In the playoff opener, Forsberg stopped 30 of 32 shots, recording a .938 save percentage. He was even better the next game when he posted a .944 SP with 34 saves on 36 shots on goal.

    How Long Can Anton Forsberg Keep This Up For The Kings? How Long Can Anton Forsberg Keep This Up For The Kings?Despite back-to-back standout performances under the crease, the Kings still trail 2-0, as their offensive struggles have wasted Anton Forsberg's elite goaltending.

In what was his first-ever experience of the post-season, Forsberg put up a total .909 SP - a number that was damaged late in Game 4 when Los Angeles needed to take chances offensively. Though without a win, he was certainly a bright spot for the Kings in the playoffs.

The Kings brought in the 33-year-old netminder through 2025 free agency. They signed the veteran to a two-year contract following four years with the Ottawa Senators as a perennial backup, besides a remarkable 2021-22 campaign.

Now, he's more than a backup goalie for the Kings and will have a much bigger role next season with the way he closed out 2025-26.

Anton Forsberg and Drew Doughty (Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images)
Anton Forsberg and Drew Doughty (Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images)

Ability To Shutdown Superstars

Los Angeles has been known for their ability to play defensively and sometimes uneventful hockey. But in a series against the Presidents' Trophy winners, it needed to be on full display, and they executed for the most part.

Before Game 4, the Kings had nearly muted Colorado's superstars with their ability to defend as a team and five-man unit.

After Game 3, players such as Nathan MacKinnon, Martin Necas, Brock Nelson, Cale Makar and Nazem Kadri were all held to just one point in the series. 

'Hard To Keep It Together': Kopitar Shares Appreciation For Kings Fans In The Closing Moments Of NHL Career'Hard To Keep It Together': Kopitar Shares Appreciation For Kings Fans In The Closing Moments Of NHL CareerLos Angeles Kings captain Anze Kopitar shared what his emotions were like as his career wound down to its final few minutes on Sunday, and how much the fans meant to him over the past 20 years.

Furthermore, despite the Avalanche having three players end the regular season with an average of over a point per game and six players who registered at least 20 goals, no one on Colorado ended the series with more than a point-per-game average.

While Los Angeles' offense couldn't hold up its end of the bargain, the way the Kings held off the mighty Avalanche was impressive, and it kept them competitive in nearly every contest.

They can take pride in what they accomplished defensively, and going into the 2026-27 campaign, they'll be confident in their ability to silence the NHL's top stars, even with Anze Kopitar out of the picture.


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MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Tuesday, April 28

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  • UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.

Please, Baby Jesus, give me the strength to find some home run props today. The weather is getting cold for the seemingly third time this season, but there are some great matchup spots to target for dingers and MLB player props

The Orioles could be batting around, facing a bullpen arm as a starter, and the Pirates have to take advantage of one of the worst starters in BlastContact percentage.

These are my favorite home run props for Tuesday, April 28, including a +17688 parlay.

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Orioles Pete Alonso+490
Pirates Oneil Cruz+370
Reds Brett Baty+570
💲Today's HR parlay+17688

Pete Alonso (+490)

It’s a good day to back the Polar Bear, Pete Alonso, on Dinger Tuesday at a price near +500.

The weather is shifting again, but Camden Yards remains a solid setting for right-handed power with the wind blowing out. Alonso also carries a 33% opposite-field fly-ball rate, and Camden has one of the shallowest right-field fences, per THE BAT.

He’ll face Kai-Wei Teng, who is making his first start after working in a multi-inning relief role. His MLB track record isn't impressive, and his command has been inconsistent.

The Baltimore Orioles could also see plenty of a vulnerable Houston Astros bullpen, which boosts the outlook for power. Houston's relievers own the worst ERA in baseball. Alonso also homered off Teng in the only meeting between the two.  

The fair price here sits around +430.

  • Time: 6:35 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MASN, Space City Home Network

Oneil Cruz (+370)

I’m getting square, but I’ll happily take a potential five-AB leadoff hitter in a strong matchup against Kyle Leahy, who ranks among the worst pitchers in baseball by Blast Contact%.

Only one starter has a worse mark, and Leahy has been getting crushed by left-handed hitters.

If swing speed is your angle, Oneil Cruz fits — he owns the second-fastest swing in baseball and is a prime target in plus matchups. The setting also helps, with temperatures in the 70s and winds blowing out to center.

If Leahy exits early, Cruz will see a St. Louis Cardinals bullpen that ranks 25th in ERA and lacks strong left-handed options.

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: SportsNet Pittsburgh, Cardinals.TV

Brett Baty (+570)

If you’re betting home runs today, make sure to include some New York Mets. Zack Littell has allowed 11 homers over 25 innings this year, with nine coming in his last three starts. He’s hanging on by a thread and is backed by one of the worst bullpens in baseball.

Left-handed hitters already have nine long balls off Littell, and while Juan Soto is a solid look at +300, Brett Baty at +570 stands out. 

He’s been the Mets’ best hitter over the last week, and his Blast Contact metrics support the surge. This is a strong spot to stack HR/RBI exposure.

  • Time: 7:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: SNY, Nationals.TV
Jinglis' 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 6-47, -14.2 units

Today’s HR parlay

Orioles Pete AlonsoBet Now
+17688
Pirates Oneil Cruz
Reds Brett Baty

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Paris Saint-Germain 5-4 Bayern Munich: Champions League semi-final, first leg – as it happened

The two best teams in Europe put on a show for the ages in Paris

3 min: Olise tries to advance down the left but Zaïre-Emery is all over him in a flash. It’s a high-octane start, and Bayern are seeing more of the ball.

2 min: Stanišić sends a long throw down the right for Musiala, who gathers by the PSG box before returning the ball to the Bayern right-back. Stanišić crosses. Pacho heads clear. A positive start by the visitors.

Continue reading...

Penguins are a win away from forcing a Game 7 at home against the Flyers after trailing series 3-0

Pittsburgh Penguins Philadelphia Flyers

Apr 27, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby (87) and Philadelphia Flyers left wing Noah Cates (27) take a third period face-off in game five of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at PPG Paints Arena. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Charles LeClaire/Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Penguins are halfway to history.

Sidney Crosby and the Penguins are aiming to become just the fifth team in NHL history to win a series after trailing 3-0. They’ve won two straight games to force Game 6 in Philadelphia.

“It’s quite clear the situation for us is win or go home,” said Crosby, who had two assists in a 3-2 win in Game 5. “I think that urgency, that desperation, whatever you want to call it, I think has brought (out) some of our best hockey because of it. So, we just gotta keep going here.”

The Flyers are among the four teams that have rallied to win a series after losing the first three games. They did it against Boston in the second round in 2010. Philadelphia ended up reaching the Stanley Cup Final that season, losing to Chicago.

“We knew it wasn’t going to be easy,” Flyers forward Owen Tippett said. “We knew we weren’t going to win every game. Reset and get back at it.”

While Philadelphia aims to advance to the second round for the first time since 2020, there are two Game 5s featuring series locked in a 2-2 tie.

The Tampa Bay Lightning rallied from a 2-0 deficit to beat the Canadiens 3-2 in Montreal in Game 4, tying the series and regaining home-ice advantage.

The Vegas Golden Knights squandered a three-goal lead but came back to defeat the Utah Mammoth 5-4 on Shea Theodore’s goal with 51.5 seconds left in overtime to even their series.

Pittsburgh Penguins at Philadelphia Flyers

When/Where to Watch: Game 6, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. EDT (TNT).

Series: Flyers lead 3-2.

Philadelphia’s seemingly comfortable 3-0 series lead doesn’t feel quite so comfortable anymore, not after consecutive victories by the Penguins in which Pittsburgh captain Crosby has been at his brilliant best.

Crosby had a goal and an assist in Game 4, then backed it up with perhaps an even better performance in Game 5, dishing out a pair of helpers, the second of which set up Kris Letang’s game-winning goal just moments after Crosby took a slapshot to his left knee and limped to the training room.

While the Flyers still are in a solid position to do what all but four teams in NHL history have done — winning a series after taking the first three games — for a youth-laden club in its first playoff series in six years, the fourth win is proving to be the hardest.

“Even though 3-0 sounded nice, we knew it wasn’t going to be over,” Philadelphia goaltender Dan Vladar said.

It’s not. The Penguins steadily have regained the form that made them one of the league’s biggest surprises during the regular season. They received secondary scoring in Game 5— third-liner Elmer Soderblom scored his first of the playoffs and fourth-liner Connor Dewar notched his second — and then clamped down during the third period to extend their season.

A chance to shift all of the pressure on the Flyers awaits if Pittsburgh can find a way to force a Game 7.

“I think the last couple games we found our stride a bit,” said Crosby, who now has 100 wins in the playoffs. “We should feel good about that. ... We’re playing good hockey and we’ve got to go in there and find a way to win again.”

Montreal Canadiens at Tampa Bay Lightning

When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Wednesday, 7 p.m. EDT (ESPN).

Series: Tied 2-2.

After three overtime games, one finally was decided in regulation when Brandon Hagel scored two goals to lift the Lightning to a 3-2 win. Hagel has six goals in the series.

“He’s definitely become the straw that stirs our drink,” Lightning coach Jon Cooper said. “Even when we went down 2-0, he stood up and looked both ways and, literally I think, captivated the bench with what he was saying and the message he was delivering.”

Hagel’s words motivated his teammates and Max Crozier inspired them with his actions.

The Lightning were down 2-0 in the second period when Crozier flattened Montreal’s Juraj Slafkovsky with a hard hit in the middle of the ice. The legal check energized Tampa Bay and changed the momentum of the game.

“The hit obviously got our bench out of their seats,” Cooper said. “But you still have to take advantage of that. We score in the last minute of the second, and in the first minute of the third, and all of a sudden the game’s completely changed. It helped take the crowd out of it.”

The Canadiens have to rebound after wasting a two-goal lead at home and missing an opportunity to take a commanding 3-1 series lead. They can’t dwell on Game 4.

“That’s a veteran team. They’re very good at drawing penalties. They got talented players,” Canadiens coach Martin St. Louis said. “They’re a tough team and we knew it was going to be a tough series. We’re right in it. We’re in a battle. It’s a fine line between winning and losing in these games, but we’re battling.”

Utah Mammoth at Vegas Golden Knights

When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Wednesday, 10 p.m. EDT (TNT, truTV HBO Max).

Series: Tied 2-2.

This opening-round series has a sense of deja vu for the Golden Knights, and Vegas hopes that’s a good sign of what’s to come.

The Golden Knights opened last year’s playoffs by prevailing in six games over the Wild. Vegas split the first two games at home, was blown out in Game 3 at Minnesota and won in overtime in Game 4 before going on to take the next two games and the series.

And the series with the Mammoth?

The almost exact beginning.

But financial advisers often warn that past performances aren’t necessarily indicative of future results, and the Golden Knights know they have a fight on their hands if they are to advance to the second round.

“I really like our squad,” coach John Tortorella said. “The most important thing for our team is to know who we are, know who you are as a club, and we are a really good hockey club. No matter what happens, we move forward with the highs and lows of a series.”

There was plenty of both for both teams in a 5-4 Vegas overtime victory at Salt Lake City.

The Golden Knights went up 3-0, Utah roared back with four unanswered goals and Vegas forced overtime in the third period. Then the Golden Knights thought they won in OT before an offside review wiped out Pavel Dorofeyev’s goal, and then actually won it on Jack Eichel’s sensational pass to Shea Theodore in the high slot for the winner with less than a minute left in overtime.

“There is plenty of hockey left in this series; a tied series going back,” Mammoth defenseman Ian Cole said. “It’s a three-game series. (We’re) focusing on what we can control and where we stand right now. I think that will do us well.”

Magic vs Pistons Prediction, Picks & Best Bets for Tonight's NBA Playoffs Game 5

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Could the Eastern Conference No. 1 seed fail to make it out of the first round? At this point, expect as much from the Detroit Pistons, and give plenty of credit to the Orlando Magic for forcing such an issue.

My Magic vs. Pistons predictions and NBA picks give credit to Orlando’s defense for how exhausted it has left Cade Cunningham, something that should continue in Game 5 on Wednesday, April 29.

  •  
  • UPDATE: Added a prediction for who will win tonight. 
 

Magic vs Pistons prediction

Who will win Magic vs Pistons Game 5?

Magic: While everyone just saw the Denver Nuggets mount a rally when returning home despite a 3-1 series deficit, Denver has a few things Detroit lacks: Two of the best postseason players in the NBA, nearly a decade of postseason experience, and a championship pedigree.

Staring disappointment in the face, do not be shocked when the young team fails to fight.

Magic vs Pistons best bet: Cade Cunningham Under 28.5 points (-120)

While this could certainly come across as insulting doubt in Detroit Pistons’ cornerstone Cade Cunningham, it is meant more as acknowledging reality.

Cunningham looked excellent in Game 1 against the Orlando Magic, playing more than 40 minutes and scoring 39 points, though Detroit still lost by double digits.

It was his first full workload since returning from a collapsed lung, playing 20-some minutes in the last three games of the regular season as he tried to get back up to speed.

But the reality is, missing three weeks because of a collapsed lung was undoubtedly going to impact Cunningham’s conditioning, and the physical nature of the Magic defense has exacerbated that.

Cunningham has shot 15-for-46 (32.6%) in the last two games, both Detroit losses. His 3-point shooting has fallen to 6 of 21 in those two games, 28.6%.

Realize, Cunningham shot 46.1% from the field and 34.6% from deep in the regular season before his injury.

While he may not yet be an efficient scorer, he is far better than the version of the last week. He is simply out of gas, as are the Pistons without Cunningham at his best.

Magic vs Pistons same-game parlay

What is more exhausting, driving into the lane against a physical and long defense or chucking 3-pointers for much of the night? Based on his choices in the last two games, Cade Cunningham would rather live beyond the arc right now.

Before his collapsed lung, he took 30.8% of his field-goal attempts from deep. In this series, it has jumped to 38.0%. In the last two games, it has been an even more alarming 45.7%.

Cunningham should hit multiple 3-pointers simply because he is taking so many rather than getting to the rim, and that inefficient approach helps keep Orlando in every game.

Magic vs Pistons SGP

  • Cade Cunningham Under 28.5 points
  • Cade Cunningham Over 1.5 threes
  • Magic +9.5

Our "from downtown" SGP: Goodnight, Detroit

Orlando has already won on the road in this series. It has firm control, and it knows the best time to clinch the series is as soon as possible.

Given how suffocating the Magic defense has been — even the Pistons’ one win featured them scoring only 98 points — there is always value in a moneyline higher than +300.

Magic vs Pistons SGP

  • Cade Cunningham Under 28.5 Points
  • Cade Cunningham Over 1.5 3-Pointers
  • Magic moneyline

Magic vs Pistons odds for Game 5

  • Spread: Magic +9.5 | Pistons -9.5
  • Moneyline: Magic +310 | Pistons -390
  • Over/Under: Over 211 | Under 211

Magic vs Pistons betting trend to know

Detroit has fallen short of its team total in all four games of this series and by an average of 13.4 points per game. Find more NBA betting trends for Magic vs. Pistons.

How to watch Magic vs Pistons Game 5

LocationLittle Caesars Arena, Detroit, MI
DateWednesday, April 29, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVPrime Video

Magic vs Pistons latest injuries

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Magic Close in on NBA History as 7th 8-Seed to Upset No. 1 Seed

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The 8-seed Orlando Magic are 48 minutes away from eliminating the top-seeded Detroit Pistons in what would be one of the biggest upsets in more than a decade.

Key Takeaways

  • The Pistons would become the fifth-largest favorite to lose to an 8-seed as a No. 1.

  • Oddsmakers have the Pistons as 9.5-point favorites in Game 5.

  • Cade Cunningham committed the most turnovers in a three-game stretch in nearly 50 years.

Up to this point, there have only been six 8-over-1 upsets in the NBA.

YearLosing TeamWinning TeamSeries Odds
2023Milwaukee BucksMiami Heat-1,200/+750
2012Chicago BullsPhiladelphia 76ers-1,400/+900
2011San Antonio SpursMemphis Grizzlies-390/+280
2007Dallas MavericksGolden State Warriors-1,800/+1,200
1999Miami HeatNew York Knicks-280/+230
1994Seattle SuperSonicsDenver Nuggets-2,000/+1,400

The Magic find themselves up 3-1 on the Pistons after a 94-88 victory in Game 4 on Monday. DraftKings now has the Magic as -255 favorites to win the series, while the Pistons are +210 underdogs.

Those marks are sharp deviations from where the teams opened the series. DraftKings had the Magic at +380, or a 20.8% implied chance, while the Pistons were -500 to move on to the second round.

The most interesting aspect of this topsy-turvy start to the series is that it doesn’t involve any mitigating circumstances. 

In 2023, the Miami Heat - +750 series underdogs against the Milwaukee Bucks, per Sports Odds History - were buoyed by Giannis Antetokounmpo suffering a lower back contusion 11 minutes into Game 1. He did not return and missed two contests before returning for Game 4. The Greek Freak averaged 32 points, 15 rebounds, and eight assists in the two contests following his return, but the Bucks still lost the series in five games.

Can Pistons avoid huge upset?

There’s plenty of blame to go around for the Pistons. The Magic only barely squeaked through the play-in tournament, losing the 7-8 matchup with the Philadelphia 76ers and winning their do-or-die game against the Charlotte Hornets.

Among the Pistons’ many issues are their misfiring stars. Cade Cunningham has posted impressive averages of 29.5 points, 7.5 assists, and 6.3 rebounds, but his shooting percentage dropped to 42.4%. He has also averaged a grotesque 6.8 turnovers per game and committed the most turnovers (24) in a three-game stretch in the playoffs since 1977-78.

Jalen Duren, who is expected to challenge for an All-NBA team after averaging 19.5 points and 10.5 rebounds on 65% shooting, has not shown up for the series. He has averaged 9.8 points and 8.3 rebounds on 46.9% shooting, never scoring more than 12 points and failing to hit double-digit rebounds in all four games.

The supporting cast hasn’t provided much help. The team has shot a combined 27.5% from three, by far the worst in the playoffs, and committed the second-most turnovers per game.

Having said all that, DraftKings still installed the Pistons as -9.5 favorites in Game 5 on Wednesday. Their only win in the series came on their home floor, where they will be for Game 5 and where they went 31-9 during the regular season. The Magic were 19-20 on the road. 

NBA title odds remain calm

While the Magic find themselves in a much more secure position than the Pistons, oddsmakers still aren’t showing them much respect. DraftKings lists them at +15,000 in NBA championship odds, while the Pistons are still at +4,500.

The Pistons' +210 series odds suggest they still have a near-one-in-three chance to rip off three straight wins and salvage their season. That will require them to do something they failed to do this season, as they split their regular-season series with Orlando at two games apiece. 

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Rockets vs Lakers Prediction, Picks & Best Bets for Tonight's NBA Playoffs Game 5

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LeBron James makes history every time he steps on the floor. He isn’t looking to be on the wrong side of it when the Los Angeles Lakers host the Houston Rockets in Game 5 on Wednesday, April 29.

As I’m sure you’ve heard, no NBA team has ever come back from a 0-3 hole to win a playoff series. But after Houston avoided the sweep at home this past weekend, the history buffs aren’t too sure that stat will hold up.

Tonight's Rockets vs. Lakers predictions know James isn’t taking Houston for granted, especially coming off one of the worst performances of his storied career.

My NBA picks like LeBron to top his scoring prop in Game 5, even if it's not enough to land the knockout punch.

  • UPDATE: Added a prediction for who will win tonight.

Rockets vs Lakers prediction

Who will win Rockets vs Lakers Game 5?

Rockets: The Lakers are home chalk for Game 5. That’s a contrast to Game 1, when they closed as 2.5-point home underdogs once Kevin Durant was ruled out. A few wins, home court, and the promise of Austin Reaves’ return has flipped the script on this series but I’m not counting out the Rockets just yet. Houston’s defense has improved greatly over the past six quarters and I think there’s value in them stealing a victory in L.A. as +150 moneyline pups.

Rockets vs Lakers best bet: LeBron James Over 23.5 Points (-115)

A lot of factors folded into LeBron James’ terrible night in Game 4. 

The tight turnaround, exhaustion from carrying the club, Tari Eason’s defense, and perhaps a little complacency all stewed together for a 2-for-9 shooting effort and just 10 points from James. Oh, and there were the eight turnovers.

Following the one-sided loss, James immediately pointed the finger at himself and was quick to correct anyone asking if the Los Angeles Lakers were comfortable with a 3-1 series edge over the Houston Rockets.

“There’s no such thing as being comfortable until a series is done. None of us are,” he told the media.

Before his dud in Game 4, James scored a combined 57 points in the two games prior and fired up 42 total field goals in those efforts. That had his scoring prop jacked to 25.5 points with heavy juice on the Over Sunday.

LeBron has now enjoyed a two-day break to recharge and reassess the Rockets’ defense, while that 10-point sputter and Austin Reaves’ possible return anchor his scoring total at 23.5 points for Wednesday night.

This number is the shortest scoring O/U listed for James since losing Reaves and Luka Doncic late in the regular season. Even if Reaves does return, he’ll likely be restricted, and the scoring load remains on James’ broad shoulders.

Player projections for Game 5 don’t discount “The King”, pegging him between 24.5 and more than 27 points Wednesday night. The pressure of giving Houston a glimmer of hope, as well as cleaning up his mess from Game 4, has me leaning toward the high side of those forecasts.

Rockets vs Lakers same-game parlay

The Rockets' offense has been a mess with Kevin Durant in and out, but Houston decided to get it done with defense in Game 4, and this team has looked much stronger on that side of the ball over the past six quarters. Those stops and turnovers translated into easy buckets, and desperation keeps things close on Wednesday.

Alperen Sengun has stepped up as the Rockets’ leader in this series and has been a steady scorer the past two games, putting up 19 and 33 points on a combined 21-for-39 shooting (54%). With the Lakers doing a better job limiting turnovers, this game is played at a slower tempo in the halfcourt, which works well for Sengun. Some models sit as high as 24.5 points in Game 5.

Rockets vs Lakers SGP

  • Rockets +4.5
  • LeBron James Over 23.5 points
  • Alperen Sengun Over 22.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Rocket Man

Alperen Sengun is the Rockets' top option with KD out. I see this as more of a half-court game, and he can go after the Lakers' weak interior defense. His projections call for 24+ points, 11+ rebounds, and he’s been a shot swatter on the defensive end all series.

Rockets vs Lakers SGP

  • Rockets moneyline
  • Alperen Sengun Over 22.5 points
  • Alperen Sengun Over 9.5 rebounds
  • Alperen Sengun Over 1.5 blocks

Rockets vs Lakers odds for Game 5

  • Spread: Rockets +4.5 | Lakers -4.5
  • Moneyline: Rockets +150 | Lakers -180
  • Over/Under: Over 208.5 | Under 208.5

Rockets vs Lakers betting trend to know

The Houston Rockets have gone Over their Team Total in 20 of their last 30 games (+8.35 Units/24% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Rockets vs. Lakers.

How to watch Rockets vs Lakers Game 5

LocationCrypto.com Arena, Los Angeles, CA
DateWednesday, April 29, 2026
Tip-off10:00 p.m. ET
TVESPN

Rockets vs Lakers latest injuries

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Reds welcome the Colorado Rockies to Cincinnati

Wilson Peak, San Juan National Forest, Colorado (Photo by: Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

It is quite likely that the last two days will the slowest of the entire season for the Cincinnati Reds.

Despite winning the overall series (and being on a roll overall), the Reds spent Sunday afternoon dropping the series finale in Great American Ball Park to the Detroit Tigers. Compounding things was the manner in which they dropped it – they surged back in the same way they have in so many wins so far this year only for their always-reliable bullpen to implode.

Then, they had one of those rare days off during the middle of a homestand, so they got to mill around town thinking about Sunday for two days with no travel in there to break it up. Hopefully, that won’t leave them ripe for a letdown against the Colorado Rockies, who are in town Tuesday to open a three-game series in GABP.

These two clubs met one another at precisely the same time in 2025, with the Reds heading west to Denver to sweep the Rockies between April 25th and 27th. While these are your father’s Rockies – they’re in last place in the National League West once again – rest assured that the 2026 Rockies are, so far, not the 2025 Rockies, as that club was a miserable 4-23 upon being swept aside in Coors Field.

The 2026 Rockies are in last place so far, but they’re 13-16 and boast just a -11 run differential. They’ve scored 118 runs – same as the Reds – and they are fresh off winning all three games they played against the New York Mets in the Big Apple (sandwiched around one game that was postponed). They also boast burgeoning ace Chase Dollander, who (as of today) is the NL leader in bWAR by a pitcher.

Lucky for the Reds, though, they’ll miss Dollander, who pitched Sunday in the team’s final game in New York. Instead, they’ll open play on Tuesday against veteran lefty Kyle Freeland, who is off to a brilliant start of his own so far this season (2.30 ERA, 1.09 WHIP across 3 starts). Cincinnati, meanwhile, will counter with their own burgeoning ace in Chase Burns, who’ll look to fireball his way past this upstart Colorado offense.

First pitch on Tuesday is set for 6:40 PM ET. With a left-handed starter on the bump for the Rockies, the Reds have chosen to stack righties in their lineup like this:

The red-hot Nate Lowe remains in the lineup as the lone guy who’ll bat left-handed against Freeland.

Go Reds!

Shohei Ohtani, the pitcher, against the Marlins

Mar 24, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) reacts after missing a pitch in the second inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images | Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

Shohei Ohtani snapped the longest home run drought of his Dodgers tenure in a three-hit game on Sunday, and collected three more hits, including an RBI double in the ninth on Monday to help set up Kyle Tucker’s walk-off winner. Ohtani has reached base nine times in his last 14 plate plate appearances over the last three games.

But he won’t hit in Tuesday’s game against the Miami Marlins, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts confirmed on Monday night. Instead, Ohtani will focus on pitching, part of the ever-present puzzle of managing the workload of a two-way player who excels at both pitching and hitting.

This is the second time in five pitching starts for Ohtani this season in which he was not also the designated hitter. The first time, on April 15 against the New York Mets, came two days after getting hit by a pitch on the back of his right shoulder, which factored into the decision.

By not swapping spots with Tyler Glasnow this series (to start the day before an off day), Ohtani on Tuesday will pitch on five days rest for the first time this season. After starting the fifth game of the season on the mound, Ohtani’s other pitching starts came on seven, six, and six days of rest.

Some of the cost of removing Ohtani from the lineup is mitigated somewhat by having backup catcher Dalton Rushing ready and able to fill in when needed at designated hitter. Rushing so far this season has started once each at DH and first base in addition to his nine catching starts, and is hitting .385/.467/.974 with seven home runs, second on the team despite batting only 45 times.

Speaking of Rushing, he pinch-hit for second baseman Santiago Espinal in the ninth inning and walked, helping to set up Tucker’s game-winner. But had the Dodgers only tied the game, things would have gotten weird in the 10th inning, because the Dodgers at that point were out of position players.

Roberts told reporters Monday night that in the 10th he would have moved Max Muncy to second base, and moved Freddie Freeman to third base with Rushing at first base. Muncy has 161 career starts at second base, but the last one was in 2022, before Major League Baseball put limitations on defensive shifts. Freeman started 16 games at third base way back in 2017 with the Atlanta Braves, but otherwise has only worn a first baseman’s glove in the field in his 17-year career.

Sure, the Dodgers won on Monday, but at the cost of expanding our sense of wonder.

Tuesday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Marlins
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium
  • Time: 7:10 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

NBA moves closer to anti-tanking measures with ‘3-2-1' draft lottery proposal

NBA moves closer to anti-tanking measures with ‘3-2-1' draft lottery proposal originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The NBA moved closer to a slightly expanded 16-team lottery Tuesday, one that will flatten odds of winning the No. 1 pick and try to deter tanking by drastically lowering the chances of winning for the teams that finish with the three worst records.

The “3-2-1 Lottery” proposal, which was reviewed by the league’s general managers, will be further discussed before it goes the Board of Governors for a final vote that is expected next month. It will not change the current format, which will likely be utilized for the final time when the lottery for this year’s draft is held May 10. This would go into effect next year.

The proposed plan will be discussed again at a competition committee meeting on Thursday. It would add two teams to the current 14-team lottery structure and incentivizes winning even for teams that aren’t still in the race for play-in or playoff spots.

The 16 teams in this proposal would all get somewhere between one and three lottery balls — hence the 3-2-1 name that has been attached to the plan — and the awarding of those balls would be broken down thusly:

— The losers of the No. 7 vs. No. 8 play-in games in both conferences would get one lottery ball each.

— The No. 9 and No. 10 seeds going into the play-in tournament would get two lottery balls each.

— The remaining 10 teams that miss the playoffs and the play-in would all get three lottery balls — with the exception of the three worst teams in the standings. They would enter “draft relegation” and have one of their lottery balls taken away, which the NBA hopes would keep teams from trying to lose as many games as they can for the worst possible record. That practice, the so-called “tanking,” has been rewarded in the current system by better lottery odds.

The league was furious this season at how some teams were clearly prioritizing their draft spot over winning, even fining the Utah Jazz $500,000 “for conduct detrimental to the league” over the way two top plays were held out of the fourth quarter of a pair of games — one of which the Jazz actually won.

There was a clear race to the bottom this season with five teams — Washington, Indiana, Utah, Memphis and Brooklyn — all having winning percentages below .180 after the All-Star break. There has never been a season in NBA history, until now, where so many teams lost that often after the break.

“The incentives are not necessarily matched here,” NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in February when discussing the correlation between the teams with the worst records having the best lottery odds. “I think the tradition in sports where the worst-performing team receives the first pick from their partners, when any economist comes and looks at our system, they always point out you have the incentives backwards there. That doesn’t necessarily make sense.”

Silver has vowed that the league — which has changed the lottery system several times over the past decades — would strongly address the tanking issue before next year.

Odds of winning

The teams that finish with the three worst records would all have a 5.4% chance of winning the No. 1 pick, and could not fall below the No. 12 pick.

But the best odds of winning No. 1 would go to the other seven teams that miss the play-in and the playoffs — with those clubs all having an 8.1% chance of finishing with the No. 1 selection.

The No. 9 and No. 10 play-in seeds would also have a 5.4% chance of winning the lottery, and the losers of the No. 7 vs. No. 8 play-in games would both have a 2.7% chance.

Major changes to odds

The three worst teams this season — Washington, Indiana and Brooklyn — have 14% odds of winning the lottery and are guaranteed a top-seven pick. (In Indiana’s case, if the Pacers finish with the fifth or sixth pick, it would convey to the Los Angeles Clippers because of a previous trade.)

In the proposed system, those teams would have a 5.4% chance of winning and could fall as low as 12th in the first-round draft order. There would be a 72% chance that those teams would fall outside the top five.

“This is a decision that needs to be made at the ownership level,” Silver said earlier this year. “It has business implications, has basketball implications, has integrity implications for the league. It’s one that we take very seriously. We are going to fix it, full stop. I want to say that directly to our fans. … Incentives need to be fixed. We will fix them. I’m looking forward to that.”

Other proposed changes

More elements within the 3-2-1 proposal include:

— No team could win back-to-back No. 1 picks or have three consecutive picks in the top five.

— No protections in trades would be allowed for picks that fall between Nos. 12 and 15.

— The league would have “expanded disciplinary authority” to address tanking, with potential moves including lowering teams’ lottery odds or even changing draft positions.

— The proposed plan, if approved, would sunset after the 2029 draft and require the Board of Governors to vote to either continue the system or make changes yet again.

Daily MLB Expert Picks & Baseball Predictions April 28

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It's an AL East theme to our MLB best bets today, as we're starting the day off with two moneylines and an Over/Under involving that division, based on the prices at Polymarket.

See why our expert MLB picks are keying in on the prices for Boston and Tampa Bay to win today, plus Baltimore to be part of a slug fest.

  • UPDATE: Added best bets for additional MLB games from Covers Staff.

MLB expert picks for today

PickOdds
Josh Inglis Josh Inglis: BOS ML-104
Neil Parker Neil Parker: TB ML+117
Joe Osborne Joe Osborne: HOU/BAL o9-108

Prices courtesy of Polymarket.

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Josh Inglis' expert pick: Red Sox moneyline

Price: 51¢ (-104) at Polymarket

The Boston Red Sox have picked things up after ownership made coaching changes following a slow start. Since then, they’ve won two straight and may hold the starting pitching edge today against the Toronto Blue Jays, who were limited to two hits yesterday (with just one off starter Ranger Suarez through eight innings). Payton Tolle was dominant in his season debut, while Trey Yesavage is making his first start after a rough rehab stint, posting an 8.59 ERA over 14+ innings, and threw just 2 1/3 innings in his last outing. The fair price on this moneyline sits closer to -115, giving Boston value.

Neil Parker's expert pick: Rays moneyline

Price: 46¢ (+117) at Polymarket

The Tampa Bay Rays send the better offense to the dish, with a 10th-ranked wOBA and the lowest strikeout percentage in the majors against righties. Plus, I don’t think Cleveland Guardians starter Tanner Bibee is completely healthy: He exited his first start of the season with right shoulder inflammation, yet never missed a turn in the rotation. His velocity dipped across the board in his most recent start, and he’s also surrendered an alarming 53.2% hard-hit rate this year.

Joe Osborne's expert pick: Astros/Orioles Over 9

Price: 52¢ (-108) at Polymarket

Kai-Wei Teng gets the start for the Houston Astros, but hasn’t reached the fourth inning in any outing this season, which likely forces heavy bullpen usage. That's not good, as the Astros bullpen has been a disaster lately. On the other side, Shane Baz is coming off back-to-back starts with four earned runs allowed. The Over has also hit in eight of nine for the Astros and in seven straight games for the Baltimore Orioles.


More MLB best bets for today

PickOdds
Marlins/Dodgers u7.5+105
Read analysis in our Marlins vs. Dodgers predictions
Royals ML-120
Read analysis in our Royals vs. A's predictions
Yankees ML-116
Read analysis in our Yankees vs. Rangers predictions
Giants ML+145
Read analysis in our Giants vs. Phillies predictions
Braves ML-117
Read analysis in our Tigers vs. Braves predictions

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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Athletics series preview: The first place A’s?

Apr 18, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Athletics third baseman Max Muncy (3) is mobbed by teammates as they celebrate his walk off sacrifice fly out during the 11th inning against the Chicago White Sox at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Scott Marshall-Imagn Images | Scott Marshall-Imagn Images

The Athletics have endured four consecutive losing seasons as they relocated eastward to Sacramento on their way to Las Vegas, but they appear to climbing out of their hole with a young roster. They had a winning record (35-29) after the All-Star break last year, and are in first place early in this season.

Kansas City Royals (11-17) vs. Athletics (15-13) at Sutter Health Park, Sacramento, CA

Royals: 4.18 runs scored/game (21st in MLB), 4.86 runs allowed/game (21st)

Athletics: 4.25 runs scored/game (18th), 4.54 runs allowed/game (18th)

The Athletics’ offensive numbers are very similar to the Royals in runs-per-game, batting average, on-base percentage, slugging percentage, home runs, and steals. They have a .360 on-base percentage at home and .291 on the road.

Twenty-nine year old rookie Carlos Cortes has been on fire, hitting .538 (14-for-26) with three home runs in his last seven games, earning AL Player of the Week honors. Nick Kurtz was fifth in the American League with 36 home runs last year, despite not making his MLB debut until April 23. Former Royals slugger Brent Rooker has struggled, but is just coming off the Injured List after missing time with an oblique injury. Infielder Jacob Wilson has the second-lowest walk rate in baseball, with just one free pass in 27 games. Max Muncy (not THIS Max Muncy) has a 35.6 percent strikeout, sixth-highest in baseball. Backup catcher Austin Wynns hit two of his six home runs last year against the Royals.

Aaron Civale has given up 17 hits and 8 runs in 10 innings over his last two starts. Salvador Perez is a career .333 hitters (7-for-21) with three home runs against him. He throws his cutter one-third of the time, but opponents are hitting .296 against it this year.

Luis Severino won his first game of the year in his last start, giving up one run in 6.2 innings against the Rangers. He’s 5-1 with a 3.67 ERA in seven career starts against the Royals, but he has a 6.15 ERA in 17 starts at Sutter Health Park.

Jeffrey Springs has had a reverse split this year, with righties hitting .185/.269/.326 against him this year. He has a 48 percent whiff rate on his change up and has been good at suppressing hard contact.

The A’s have a 4.05 ERA from their bullpen, using a collection of unproven pitchers, and cast-offs from other organizations. Joel Kuhnel is a 31-year-old journeyman who barely has 100 career MLB innings, and has been anointed the closer early on, although 26-year-old Jack Perkins has also had some save opportunities. Former Royals pitcher Scott Barlow joined the A’s after posting a 4.21 ERA in 75 games with the Reds last year.

After a disappointing series loss at home to the White Sox, the Athletics went on the road and won series in Seattle and Texas. They have some talent, but a lot of inconsistent pitching. Sutter Health Park has been a very home run-friendly ballpark, so this is an opportunity for the Royals’ offense to keep rolling.

Bullpen report: The one neat trick that makes it look great

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 26: Ryan Borucki #47 and Erik Miller #68 of the San Francisco Giants prepares for the game at Oracle Park on April 26, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Andy Kuno/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last season, I revived the wonderful groug’s Bullpen Trust Power Ranking bit to… mixed results. This year, I thought I’d try something different and simply review it every month. It’s not yet the end of April, but it’s been over a month since the season started, so now is a great time to check in. My one sentence review:

It has been way better than three NRIs in a trench coat.

When the season started, the bullpen seemed like an experiment being conducted by Buster Posey and Zack Minasian to see just how anonymous they could make the group. The Giants obviously believe that spending lots of money on pitching is one of the deadliest things a team can do and so they look to cut corners there wherever they can. And, perhaps, Buster Posey’s memory of being a player might have him thinking about the “guy off the street” feeling the bullpens had during the championship era and letting that inform his decision-making. I am a big believer in the whole “relievers are fungible” philosophy. It feels like the Giants have taken it to an extreme.

That might have more to do with Posey being a Hall of Fame catcher than a sophomore exec, though, and after hiring a guy with a staff well-versed in coaching up and optimizing pitchers, it all makes a lot of sense. Our general unfamiliarity with it is less important than the results on the field. Which, as you’ll recall, weren’t great in the first week or so.

This morning, Alex Pavlovic pointed out in a post that the Giants’ bullpen looks incredible — a 1.51 ERA! — if you pick things up starting April 7th. That leads the sport. Their 2.73 xERA is 2nd overall and leads the NL, too, in this same span. Of course, overall, the bullpen has been good from an ERA standpoint (2.93 — 3rd in MLB), but this micro-split, timed with the Giants turning things around overall (10-7 from April 7th on), feels appropriate.

We’re in the small sample size fun zone of the early season for sure, but the improvised, figure it out as they go bullpen is being figured out before our very eyes. One important-ish stat I talked about two and a half weeks ago was the average fastball velocity, which at the time — in, again, what was a very small sample — was 10th in MLB at 94.7 mph. But with lots more Erik Miller, Keaton Winn, Caleb Kilian, and now Blade Tidwell contributing to the sample, they’ve sped up to 4th overall in MLB (95.7 mph) which is a big part of why the team is #7 in MLB in bullpen strikeout rate (24.8%). This is the really good stuff.

Where the bullpen remains troubling is in the other two outcomes: an 11.9% walk rate that’s 23rd in MLB. They’re hanging around middle of the pack when it comes to home runs on flyballs, too. These are all “for the season” results, so let’s hop back to that “since April 7th” cutoff that Pavlovic provided this morning.

Individually, while there’s a lot of JT Brubaker in the sample, his lesser stuff is balanced out by a bracing shot of Blade Tidwell, who probably didn’t think he would be destined for a bullpen role when the Giants traded for him, but he’s been really effective there. Another see-saw of talent is groundball rates. Keaton Winn and Matt Gage are closer to 40%, and along with JT Brubaker this trio represents the flyball sector of the bullpen. Brubaker is skating by on cunning and guile in that regard, but Gage’s 92.5 mph average velocity and 6.13 FIP on a .188 BAbip are yellowish-red flags for that pair. Meanwhile, Keaton Winn’s 1.23 FIP is the other side of those concerns. He’s just been that good. Even Ryan Borucki has been solid (1.93 ERA in last 5 appearances) and Ryan Walker has been good — nowhere close to the half-season disaster of 2025.

Another “since April 7th” stat: every reliever has helped the Giants win. They all have positive Win Probability Added. Click the link and check it out right now! We might never see that again. Sure, it might seem like cheating to toss out a handful of games to make the picture look better, but it’s such a stark difference and the eye test from this recent run of games only supports it that I declare it’s not bad or illogical to do that. The Giants left Arizona knowing they had to figure some things out.

So, the great bullpen experiment of 2026 has worked out positively so far, perhaps even sooner than expected. It’s a bullpen that features different looks. Not just from arm angles, but also velocity and general stuff. It’s funky and it’s working well.