The Cavaliers could be moving their first-round pick

Coach Kenny Atkinson and president of basketball operations Koby Altman hold their Cavaliers Media Day availability on Friday, Sept. 27, 2024, in Independence. | Nate Ulrich / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The NBA draft is tonight, and the Cleveland Cavaliers currently hold the 29th pick. The options for the team seem to be vast as they look to navigate not only the prospect pool but the salary cap. According to Cleveland.com’s Chris Fedor, the team is putting all options on the table.

Fedor describes that the Cavaliers at this point are “currently exploring the possibility of moving out of the late first round”. It appears the team not only could move out of the first round, but possibly the entire 2026 draft.

According to Fedor, it also appears that the current estimated pool of players available at 29 don’t excite the Cavaliers. However, “if the Cavs view a group of prospects on the same talent tier, they could move back, still get one, save money and possibly add more draft capital, either this year or in a future draft.”

Some players that have been linked to the Cavaliers that could be tied to this player pool are Zuby Ejiofor (St. Johns), Alex Karaban (UCONN), Tarris Reed Jr (UCONN), Henri Veesaar (UNC), and Jaden Bradley (Alabama).

Another option floated in the article is that the first could be used as a sweetener to take a big salary to shed some cap. Attaching the first rounder with someone like Dennis Schroder would be the most likely avenue to avoid having to pay Schroder his remaining $31 million over two years.

The Cavaliers would be best to trade the pick with Schroder to shed his massive cap hit. As Dean Wade is generating interest around the league, it’ll be better for the team in the short term to get off the Schroder cap number.

While draft picks are the exciting asset to have, for the unknown of what the player could become, the Cavaliers have shorter timelines not suited for developing a project, which is likely what they will get with the 29th selection or picks in the second round.

To demonstrate this, look at the Cavaliers’ most recent first-round draft pick. Jaylon Tyson was selected with the 20th pick in 2024 and just started to crack the regular rotation a year later than he was drafted.

While this class is considered to be deep, the talent once you hit the 20s always comes down to team preference over talent level. Unless the Cavaliers have someone on their big board who magically falls to them, it seems more than likely that they will not retain the player drafted tonight.

How college basketball teams have done after their coach left for NBA

ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - JANUARY 23: Former Michigan Head Coach John Beilein speaks at a press conference ahead of the Michigan Wolverines basketball game against Ohio State and Trey Burke's jersey retirement at Crisler Arena on January 23, 2026 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. (Photo by Jaime Crawford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Dusty May’s late-June departure for the NBA is incredibly rare. It has been done before, but it hasn’t been done since another Michigan coach, John Beilein, left for the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2019. The dream of a Michigan dynasty under May is now dead, so what should Michigan fans expect next year?

Obviously there are still a ton of moving parts that will need to be settled. Michigan’s roster will be in a state of flux. However, we can look at some historical precedent to see how well teams have performed the year after their coach left for the NBA.

John Beilein, Michigan to Cleveland Cavaliers in May 2019

As Michigan fans are painfully aware, the last NCAA head coach to leave for the NBA immediately as a head coach was a legendary figure in Ann Arbor. With most of available college coaches already taken, Warde Manuel pivoted to program legend Juwan Howard, who was an NBA assistant coach at the time.

Howard inherited a program that was firing on all cylinders. He largely kept the train moving in the first year, finishing 19-12 and headed for the NCAA Tournament before the pandemic canceled the tournament.

Billy Donovan, Florida to Oklahoma City Thunder in April 2015

Donovan experienced a bit of a down year in his last season at the helm of the Gators. Florida went 16-17 and missed the NCAA Tournament. Florida then hired Mike White, who marginally improved the team in his first season by going 21-15 but still missing the tournament. This wasn’t a crazy improvement, but it was marginally better than Donovan’s last season.

Fred Hoiberg, Iowa State to Chicago Bulls in June 2015

Hoiberg had built a perennial tournament team at Iowa State, which was relatively rare. The year he left, the Cyclones were a 3-seed in the NCAA Tournament before being upset by 14-seed UAB. To replace him, Iowa State hired Steve Prohm out of Murray State. He lost more than half of the roster from the previous season, but did an excellent job and built a 4-seed in his first season. The Cyclones went 23-12 and made it to the Sweet Sixteen.

Brad Stevens, Butler to Boston Celtics in July 2013

Brad Stevens coached two seasons at Butler after his magical run to the National Championship. When he left for the Celtics, Butler was also moving up from the A-10 to the Big East. Incoming coach Brandon Miller had a tall task ahead of him. Not only that, but Butler’s best returning player, Roosevelt Jones, got hurt and missed the season. Needless to say, the Bulldogs had a reasonable slide back to reality. Butler finished 14-17 and did not play in a postseason tournament.

Mike Montgomery, Stanford to Golden State Warriors in June 2004

Montgomery was at Stanford for 18 years before jumping to the NBA. His replacement, Trent Johnson, went 18-13 in his first season with the Cardinal. Stanford made the NCAA Tournament as an 8-seed but lost in the Round of 64. For context, in Montgomery’s last season at Stanford, they went 30-2 and were a 1-seed in the NCAA Tournament. Stanford lost both Montgomery and Josh Childress, who was the No. 6 overall pick in the 2004 NBA Draft.

Leonard Hamilton, Miami to Washington Wizards in May 2000

Many people forget Leonard Hamilton spent 10 seasons as the coach at Miami. In his final season, the Hurricanes went 23-11. They were a 6-seed in the NCAA Tournament and made it to the Sweet Sixteen. Miami replaced Hamilton with Perry Clark, who struggled mightily in his first season. The Hurricanes went 16-13 and missed the NCAA Tournament in 2000-01. Miami would be stagnant for a few years before eventually hiring Jim Larranaga.

Lon Kruger, Illinois to Atlanta Hawks in June 2000

In Kruger’s last season at Illinois, the Fighting Illini went 22-10 and made it to the second round of the NCAA Tournament as a 4-seed. However, Kruger leaving was a blessing in disguise as they replaced him with Bill Self. Self quickly built Illinois into a juggernaut, going 27-8 in his first season at the helm. Illinois was a Big Ten co-champion and made the Elite 8 as a 1-seed.

Tim Floyd, Iowa State to Chicago Bulls in July 1998

Tim Floyd’s last season was largely a disaster, as the Cyclones went 12-18 and missed the big dance. He was replaced by Larry Eustachy, who went 15-15 in his first year. Eustachy lost most of the roster he inherited, as they elected to transfer. He would eventually turn the program around, but the first year was a struggle.

Rick Pitino, Kentucky to Boston Celtics in May 1997

Pitino appears twice on this list. In his most recent trip from the NCAA to the NBA, he left Kentucky after losing in the National Championship with guys like Ron Mercer, Derek Anderson and Jamaal Magloire. Pitino was replaced by Tubby Smith, who managed to keep nearly the entire roster intact. Smith one-upped Pitino by winning the National Championship in his first season. This was the best case scenario for Kentucky.

John Calipari, UMass to New Jersey Nets in May 1996

Coach Cal made a name for himself at UMass. In his last season with the Minutemen, Calipari took the team to the Final Four on the back of Marcus Camby, though it would eventually be vacated as Camby was given gifts in the recruiting process. UMass promoted Bruiser Flint from within. Unfortunately the wheels fell off for UMass, as they struggled to a 19-14 record with a first round exit in the NCAA Tournament.

P.J. Carlesimo, Seton Hall to Portland Trail Blazers in June 1994

Carlesimo coached at Seton Hall for 12 years before eventually leaving for Portland. In his final year, the Pirates went 17-13 and made the NCAA Tournament but lost in the first round. Carlesimo was replaced by George Blaney, who went 16-14 and missed the NCAA Tournament in his first year.

Jerry Tarkanian, UNLV to San Antonio Spurs in June 1992

Tarkanian had built a behemoth of a basketball program. Having won a National Championship in 1990, taken the team to the Final Four in 1991 and the Elite 8 in 1992 it was only fitting that the NBA came calling. However, NCAA investigations heavily clouded the end of Tarkanian’s tenure. He was replaced by Rollie Massimino, who went 21-8 in his first year. They made the NCAA Tournament but lost in the Round of 32. UNLV’s program would eventually unravel, but things stayed partially intact.

Rick Pitino, Providence to New York Knicks in July 1987

Pitino was only at Providence for two years (similar to May), but those two years were wonderful for the Friars. Providence lost in the Final Four in Pitino’s second and final season before leaving for the Knicks. They replaced Pitino with Gordon Chiesa, who was only at Providence for one season and went 11-17.

Royals Reacts Survey: Would you like to see Jac Caglianone in the Home Run Derby?

A view from behind Jac Caglianone immediately following a home run swing
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JUNE 21: Jac Caglianone #14 of the Kansas City Royals hits a home run in the ninth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Kauffman Stadium on June 21, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Royals fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Jac Caglianone is fully in the running for AL player of the month for June, with just a week left. As of this morning, he is third in the AL in wRC+ behind only his Team Italy teammate Dominic Canzone and Yordan Alvarez, who could become the AL MVP favorite if Bobby Witt Jr. misses significant time with his knee injury. While he’s not a burner and isn’t rated particularly well defensively, he still edges out both of those players in fWAR. Dillon Dingler, with superior defense at the catcher position, is the only player higher than Jac there. Perhaps most importantly for today’s question, though, only two players in the AL have hit more jacks than Jac in the month of June: Nick Kurtz and Byron Buxton.

It’s a good time to jump on the Jac Wagon, is what I’m saying.

But as June wraps up, we all begin to turn our thoughts to the upcoming All-Star festivities. Bobby seems primed to finally get his first start at Shortstop in the Midsummer Classic. It’s not entirely clear which, if any other Royals, might join him on the roster. Jac seems like a possibility, but you don’t actually have to be an All-Star to be invited to participate in the Home Run Derby.

Last year’s derby featured Oneil Cruz, despite the fact that he was not an All-Star. It wasn’t evenly split among AL and NL, with 5 AL players participating to 3 NL. The AL participants were first, fourth, fifth, eighth, and fifteenth on the home run leaderboard for their league. The NL players were sixth, seventeenth, and twenty-second. In fact, the only real criterion for participating is that people have to want to see you smack dingers, and who do you want to watch hit dingers right now more than Jac Caglianone?

To that end, I’ll make a bit of a clarification about the term “deserves” in the following poll. Since there are no criteria, use your own! Maybe you think Jac doesn’t deserve it because he’s barely in the top 25 in the AL for home runs. Or maybe you think he does deserve it because you’re a Royals fan. The point is, vote your heart, but vote. And, of course, don’t forget to vote Jac, Bobby, and the rest of the Royals to the All-Star Game!

Series Preview: Somehow, the Athletics are no longer the worst and most embarrassing team in Northern California

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 18: Shea Langeliers #23 of the Athletics celebrates with Zack Gelof #20 and Nick Kurtz #16 after hitting a three-run home run in the bottom of the first inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Sutter Health Park on June 18, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Five weeks ago, the Giants took 2 out of 3 from these Athletics and were a bad, but not completely embarrassing 20-27. That series ended with a 10-1 blowout that looked so good that all the Giants seemed to get healthy from it. Adrian Houser even got the win thanks to 6 innings of 1-run ball. Since then, the Giants have gone 11-19, Adrian Houser has been demoted to the bullpen, and even the vestiges of the notion that this season might wind up being at least a little entertaining have long since withered away. The Athletics are not a good baseball team (they have the same -54 run differential), but they are a far cry from whatever the Giants are supposed to be.

So, it should be an interesting series at Oracle Park this week! The Giants return home after a 40% decent road trip while the Athletics work their way through a strange part of their schedule. Technically, they’ve just concluded a 13-game homestand, and with these 3 in San Francisco, even though they’re in West Sacramento now, that’s still basically an extension of the homestand. But 6 of these games were technically in Summerlin, Nevada as a special showcase for their future home crowd. They went 4-2 during this stretch, and just 3-4 upon returning to Sutter Health Park.

Anyway, the A’s Shea Langeliers leads all American League catchers in All-Star voting (1,414,697 in the first batch of ballots, +577,408 over Alejandro Kirk) while first baseman Nick Kurtz is 4th in the AL first base vote race, trailing Munetaka Murakami for 3rd by ~150,000 votes. Kurtz has followed up his Rookie of the Year 2025 with another stellar season — 19 home runs in 353 PA with a triple slash of .290/.439/.556. He is the sixth-most valuable player according to FanGraphs’ fWAR (3.5). Langeliers is 28th (2.4 fWAR) on a .271/.333/.521 line — he also has 19 home runs (321 PA). He trails in overall value at the catching position behind Detroit’s Dillon Dingler (3.6 fWAR) and Adley Rutschman (2.3), but there he is leading the pack for the moment. They are the primary engine of the A’s lineup, too, as West Sac is just 10th in runs scored (364) and 7th in wRC+ (105). They’re also one of the worst defenses in the sport (-25.1 Defensive Runs Above Average — 28th in MLB).

Thanks to their ballpark — well, at least in part — the Athletics’ pitching is actually worse than the Giants. Their team ERA of 5.04 trails only Colorado in all of MLB. Their +3.1 fWAR is just half a win worse than the Giants’ pitching value (3.6 — 25th). But the Athletics actually get much better away from their home park(s). Their team road ERA of 3.67 is fourth-best in MLB (though, their 4.18 xFIP is only 14th). They also have a 20-17 road record, which is currently the second-best road record in MLB behind only the Yankees. The Giants are 14-20 at home.

How relieved is John Fisher right now? The Giants are villains, his cursed stadium project is now proceeding apace, and there’s probably going to be a lockout that “right-sizes” labor costs going forward. The hatred towards him will probably fade and who cares about Oakland and those fans? This is the bet the Giants are making, that time plus inertia will carry them through any controversy. Most sports team owners seem to have settled into an adversarial relationship with their fans, realizing that they can treat them like paypigs and come away richer and entirely unscathed. Such is the story of the 21st century and wealthy, right?

But while the Giants and Athletics have owners who are no different from the rest of the world, it’s rare that you get to see former “crosstown” rivals where the fan bases would teeter-totter the moral high ground get shoved together when both franchises are on the same moral plain. It’s a series that far fewer people have cared about than ever before, even if these teams have quickly become a mirror for each other.


Who: San Francisco Giants (31-46) vs. Athletics (38-40)
Where: Oracle Park | San Francisco, California
When: Tuesday & Wednesday at 6:45pm PT, Thursday at 12:45pm PT
National broadcasts: None

Projected starters
Tuesday: Robbie Ray (LHP 5-6, 4.07 ERA) vs. Aaron Civale (RHP 5-3, 4.91 ERA)
Wednesday: Tyler Mahle (RHP 1-7, 6.04 ERA) vs. Gage Jump (LHP 3-1, 2.37 ERA)
Thursday: Landen Roupp (RHP 5-7, 4.15 ERA) vs. Jeffrey Springs (LHP 3-7, 5.55 ERA)


Players to watch

Athletics

Jacob Wilson: The shortstop dislocated his shoulder and was on the IL before the last series, and up to that point he’d been having “the sophomore slump,” following his 2025 rookie season (where he placed 2nd behind teammate Nick Kurtz) of .311/.355/.444 with .292/.311/.398 through his first 39 games of 2026 (168 PA). Since being activated on June 12th, he’s just 8-for-35 with a homer, 2 doubles and 4 walks and 4 strikeouts (.229/.308/.371), but in the just concluded 4-game series against the Angels, he was 4-for-16 with that homer, one of those doubles, and 2 walks and 2 strikeouts (.250/.333/.500). He also had this cool slide to avoid a tag at home plate:

Jeff McNeil: The Mets’ attempt to shakeup their roster blew up in their faces this season, but it’s not like David Stearns didn’t have some idea of what he was doing. The 34-year old McNeil was clearly on the downside of his career, but he has fallen waaaaay off he cliff, going from a better than league average hitter for his career to nearly 30% below the average. He has, historically, tormented the Giants, but in that series at Sutter Health Park, he was just 2-for-8 with a double and pair of RBI. And since that series, over hist last 96 PA, he’s hitting just .172/.250/.253. But! He’s a career .345/.409/.536 hitter at Oracle Park.

Gage Jump: The A’s Competitive Balance Round B pick of the 2024 draft is already up in the majors and looks like a real stud. He’s the team’s #3 prospect according to MLB Pipeline and #38 in the entire sport. It feels like he should be higher? A lefty starter who averages 96 mph with his four seamer and has swing and miss breaking pitches on top of a changeup? Nasty, nasty, nasty. Rafael Devers leads the starting lineup in pitches seen with 95+ mph velocity, experiencing that pitch 26.5% of the time. He’s hitting .231 against that sort of velocity. Luis Arraez is second among the starters at 24.1%, but he’s hitting .431. That they’re both lefties and Gage is a lefty could be a pretty compelling reason why this will be a tough matchup.

Giants

Tyler Mahle: Adrian Houser to the bullpen is what gets Mahle a start coming back from the IL. The Giants need to try to salvage his value because there is a high probability that he is tradeable if he bounces back. He made one appearance for the River Cats, walking 5 while striking out 3 and allowing a run. Okay, so, yeah, maybe it’s unlikely he bounces back.

Rafael Devers: Wednesday’s game against Gage Jump seems like a great time to sit Devers, especially after his emotional outburst on Sunday, but going back to the Cubs series at Wrigley Field (14 games, 62 PA), he’s been working hard to make me eat some crow after writing about how he’s unlikely to hit much better this season: .231/.355/.538 (.893 OPS), 4 homers, 4 doubles, 10 walks, 16 strikeouts.

Willy Adames: That series at Sutter Health Park marked Adames’s turnaround. He had a .592 OPS going into the series and since then (32 games, 137 PA), he’s slashing .230/.285/.532 (.816). Technically, a .285 on base percentage is bad. A 3:1 strikeouts to walk ratio is also bad. That the streak is really only a 20 game segment, as his last 12 games (49 PA) is a bad line of .083/.102/.208. He has just 1 walk and 16 strikeouts. He’sjust 4-for-his-last-48. A total disaster.


Prediction time

The Giants will do something really dumb. An A will hit a home run.

Royals place Maikel Garcia on the Injured List

May 30, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Kansas City Royals third baseman Maikel Garcia (11) comes up with a leg injury during the seventh inning against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Andrew Dieb-Imagn Images | Andrew Dieb-Imagn Images

Maikel Garcia has been banged up for the last month, and today the Royals finally placed him on the 10-day Injured List with a left hand muscle strain. Before that, Garcia had been dealing with a hamstring strain earlier this month. Infielder Josh Rojas was recalled from Triple-A Omaha.

Garcia told reporters he had been dealing with hand soreness since a series against the Cardinals in mid-May. He exited a game last Tuesday in Washington when he reaggravated the injury, and and was out until Sunday’s game against the Cardinals. He was 0-for-5 that day, but went 1-for-4 last night against the Rays. Garcia has appeared in 69 games this year, and is hitting .261/.320/.373 with three home runs, good for 1.6 rWAR.

Rojas is an eight-year MLB veteran, who has hit .241/.317/.352 in his career with the Diamondbacks, Mariners, and White Sox. He was up briefly for the Royals earlier this year, appearing in two games and going 1-for-5. The left-handed hitter is capable of playing all over the field, and was hitting .251/.313/.445 with eight home runs in 58 games for Omaha.

The Royals are also without shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., who is nursing a knee injury but has not yet been placed on the Injured List. That leaves them with Rojas, Isaac Collins, Nick Loftin, Michael Massey, and Tyler Tolbert as the only healthy infielders on the roster, in addition to first baseman Jac Caglianone. Witt is wearing a brace on his knee, but took grounders yesterday and hit for the first time since injuring it on Thursday.

A closer look at the Cincinnati Reds roster now that Elly De La Cruz is back

CINCINNATI, OHIO - JUNE 03: Elly De La Cruz #44 of the Cincinnati Reds looks on from the dugout with teammate Edwin Arroyo #2 during a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals at Great American Ball Park on June 03, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeff Dean/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cincinnati Reds formally activated Elly De La Cruz from the 10-day injured list on Tuesday morning ahead of the team’s second game against the Milwaukee Brewers of this series. In doing so, the Reds add back their perennial All Star and offensive anchor, hopefully helping hoist a lineup back into respecability after it has limped through the three weeks without him.

In doing so, though, the Reds did not option to AAA the guy who’d been called up to replace him.

Cincinnati opted to keep infielder Edwin Arroyo on the club, instead optioning the struggling Will Benson to Louisville as the other end of the transaction. For once, it finally seems the Reds chose to go with the ‘keep the 26 best players you have on the roster’ method to a roster move than they did ‘make sure guys we want for the future get as many PA as they possibly can’ route they’ve taken so many times before.

With Elly back, it certainly doesn’t look as if the Reds have a clear path to play Arroyo a lot. Elly will take shortstop back, Matt McLain – who posted an .807 OPS in the time Elly was sidelined – will slide back over to his customary 2B. Edwin can play some 3B, in theory, but that’s where Eugenio Suarez and Sal Stewart get most of the reps, while Stewart will have company at 1B with Spencer Steer and Nate Lowe in the mix, too.

If anything, it’s reflection of just how sturdy the team’s outfield is a the moment. Blake Dunn has looked perfectly cromulent in CF, actually hitting RHP better than LHP and providing increased speed and defense at the position over what they’d had earlier in the year. Noelvi Marte has hit .267/.313/.556 (.868 OPS) since being recalled as the team’s primary RF, while JJ Bleday’s breakout season is taking place in LF. Steer, who’ll also see time at 2B, has therefore seen his time as an outfielder dwindle since Marte’s return, while Benson had basically been benched altogether.

What Arroyo does bring to the table for manager Terry Francona is pretty elite defense, should the Reds need it late in the game at any point on the diamond, as well as the ability to hit from both sides of the plate late in games. Benson did not provide either of those things. I also get the impression that Tito would be willing to send Arroyo up there to bunt in a big spot, something that a) I don’t get the feeling he’d do with Benson and b) something that I acknowledge I hope won’t happen at all at any point.

It also begs the question – will the Reds ease Elly back into playing shortstop on a regular basis to help monitor his hamstring issue? Might we see him as the team’s DH a bit more often? If that’s the case, then prioritizing defense up the middle would see Arroyo/McLain take SS/2B as theirs on an often enough basis to make keeping their prized young infield prospect on the roster instead of down at AAA getting 4-5 PA every single day.

We’ll find out in the coming weeks. What’s most important, though, is that the Reds now have their best player back for a crucial stretch of baseball.

New York Islanders hire Pascal Dupuis as director of player development

NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Islanders hired Stanley Cup winner Pascal Dupuis as director of player development, the team announced Tuesday.

Dupuis, 47, spent the past three seasons in the front office for the Shawinigan Cataractes in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League and has been with the team in various capacities the past six years since becoming a co-owner.

“Pascal is exactly the kind of person we want shaping the next generation of Islanders,” general manager Mathieu Darche said. “Pascal’s perspective will be invaluable for our developing players who are trying to find their way to the Islanders. We couldn’t be more excited to welcome him to the organization.”

Dupuis played 15 years in the NHL and was part of Pittsburgh’s title team in 2009.

“His story is one every young player in our system can learn from as nothing was handed to him,” Darche said. “He was undrafted, found his way to the NHL through his tireless work ethic and built a career playing over 800 NHL games."

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/NHL

New York Islanders hire Pascal Dupuis as director of player development

NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Islanders hired Stanley Cup winner Pascal Dupuis as director of player development, the team announced Tuesday.

Dupuis, 47, spent the past three seasons in the front office for the Shawinigan Cataractes in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League and has been with the team in various capacities the past six years since becoming a co-owner.

“Pascal is exactly the kind of person we want shaping the next generation of Islanders,” general manager Mathieu Darche said. “Pascal’s perspective will be invaluable for our developing players who are trying to find their way to the Islanders. We couldn’t be more excited to welcome him to the organization.”

Dupuis played 15 years in the NHL and was part of Pittsburgh’s title team in 2009.

“His story is one every young player in our system can learn from as nothing was handed to him,” Darche said. “He was undrafted, found his way to the NHL through his tireless work ethic and built a career playing over 800 NHL games."

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/NHL

Marcus Smith vows England will ‘leave it all out there’ against South Africa

  • Squad are due to arrive in Johannesburg on Thursday

  • Springboks coach Rassie Erasmus praises Henry Pollock

Marcus Smith says England are flying south determined to make a fast and furious start to the new Nations Championship at South Africa’s expense next week. A 36-man squad will touch down in Johannesburg on Thursday and Smith says there is a shared desire to rise to the high-altitude challenge of upsetting the world champions in their backyard.

England have been training in oxygen masks in Bagshot to prepare themselves for the Highveld and, with games against Fiji and Argentina to follow, are conscious of the need to make an early impression against the Springboks. “It’s one shot,” said Smith, who has now played 50 Tests for his country. “We’ve spoken about leaving it all out there. It’s a hell of an opportunity. I don’t think England have been there since 2018 so we could create history, going down there to deliver a result.

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2026 MLB Awards Tracker: Power Rankings, betting odds for MVP, Cy Young: Misiorowski, Schlittler lead the way

With the All-Star Weekend a few weeks away, the jockeying for MVP and Cy Young pole position in the second half of the season has begun. Shohei Ohtani continues to runaway with NL MVP, but for the other three awards, the race is far from over.

National League Cy Young Poll

1. Jacob Misiorowski, Milwaukee Brewers (-160)

2026 Stats: 93.0 IP, 8-3, 1.45 ERA, 0.75 WHIP, 138 K, 23 BB, .146 OBA

In Jacob Misiorowski's latest start, he allowed two earned runs versus Boston, which resulted in his third loss of the season, but it was still one for the record books. Misiorowski tossed 47 pitches of at least 101 mph, which was a stat cast record and he recorded 54 pitches of 100-plus mph.

The 24-year-old leads the MLB in ERA (1.45), WHIP (0.75), strikeouts (138), OBA (.146), and shutouts (1). He's allowed three earned runs over the last nine starts and 60.1 innings to go along with 87 strikeouts to 10 walks. As long as he stays healthy in the second half of the season, Misiorowski could absolutely win this award, but he'll have competition.

2. Cristopher Sanchez, Philadelphia Phillies (+250)

2026 Stats: 105.0 IP, 9-3, 1.80 ERA, 1.09 WHIP, 121 K, 20 BB, .234 OBA

Since Christopher Sanchez had his scoreless inning streak broken to start June, the lefty has a 2.85 ERA, a .216 OBA, plus a 3-1 record with 26 strikeouts to four walks (four starts). Philadelphia has won eight of his last 10 starts and 11 out of 15 on the season.

Per MLB.com, Sanchez joins an elite group of pitchers to have 120-plus strikeouts, an ERA of 1.80 or better over 105 innings and their first 16 starts to a season. He became the 11th pitcher to accomplish the feat. Eight of the other pitchers won a Cy Young in the same season.

3. Paul Skenes, Pittsburgh Pirates (+1500)

2026 Stats: 88.0 IP, 6-7, 2.86 ERA, 0.93 WHIP, 107 K, 18 BB, .199 OBA

Paul Skenes has back-to-back losses on two runs allowed in each of those games. The Pirates offense has reverted back to not giving Skenes run support as he sports a 6-7 record despite a 2.86 ERA. Skenes now has two or fewer earned runs in five straight games and 12 out of 16 on the season.

In June, Skenes has 32 strikeouts to six walks over 22.2 innings and four starts. Skenes has a 0-2 record though with seven earned runs on 20 hits. Last year's Cy Young winner ranks top 10 in the MLB for strikeouts (6th), OBA (7th) and WHIP (5th). Skenes is a distant third-place behind Misiorowski and Sanchez, while Shohei Ohtani and Chase Burns aren't far behind Skenes.

Long Shot: Chase Burns, Cincinnati Reds (+2800)

2026 Stats: 85.2 IP, 9-1, 2.00 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, 102 K, 29 BB, .197 OBA

Chase Burns has been on a tear over May and June. The Reds have won seven of his last eight starts as Burns has recorded a win in six of those contests. The 23-year-old has permitted two or fewer earned runs in 12 consecutive games. That is the longest since in Reds franchise history since Edinson Volquez in 2008.

If you go back 15 games, Burns has allowed two or fewer runs in 14 of them. No Reds pitcher has done that since at least 1900. Burns has seven or more strikeouts in seven-straight games, something that only one Reds pitcher has done more times since 1900 (Jim Maloney, 8 games in 1963).

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

American League Cy Young Poll

1. Cam Schlittler, New York Yankees (+100)

2026 Stats: 95.0 IP, 8-3, 1.71 ERA, 0.89 WHIP, 109 K, 18 BB, .194 OBA

Cam Schlittler is coming off a career-high 13 strikeouts in his last game versus the Reds, a shutout win with four hits and zero walks. The second-year pro became the youngest Yankee (25) to record 13 strikeouts with no walks in a game. Next up for Schlittler off his historic start — a trip to Fenway to face the rival Red Sox.

2. Dylan Cease, Toronto Blue Jays (+230)

2026 Stats: 78.2 IP, 4-3, 2.75 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, 118 K, 35 BB, .206 OBA

The strikeout train is still rolling and Dylan Cease has a first row seat. In June, Cease has a 1.62 ERA, .169 OBA, 26 strikeouts to nine walks and 10 hits allowed over 16.2 innings. Despite only reaching six or more innings in five of his 14 starts, Cease is third in strikeouts (118) and allowed four or fewer hits in six consecutive games (9 out of 14).

3. Drew Rasmussen, Tampa Bay Rays (+1400)

2026 Stats: 86.0 IP, 6-4, 2.62 ERA, 0.88 WHIP, 89 K, 15 BB, .194 OBA

Drew Rasmussen is starting to heat up in June with a 1.00 ERA, .141 OBA, and 34 strikeouts to three walks over four starts. Rasmussen has gone 27.0 innings in those four starts and has three earned runs, which has resulted in a 2-2 record due to lack of run support.

The 30-year-old recorded a career-high 13 strikeouts versus Boston on June 10 and pitched six-plus innings in four straight games. Rasmussen is pitching better than Jacob deGrom lately, so Rasmussen gets the nod in the third spot.

Long Shot: Tarik Subal, Detroit Tigers (+3500)

2026 Stats: 53.2 IP, 3-3, 3.02 ERA, 1.02 WHIP, 57 K, 8 BB, .235 OBA

Tarik Skubal has returned and faced two AL Central opponents, the Guardians and White Sox. Skubal struck out 12 and walked two over 10.1 innings. The issue in both starts was home runs allowed. Skubal gave away three home runs in two games and five earned runs allowed. If he finds his dominant form soon and Detroit climbs to .500 soon after the All-Star break or makes the postseason this year, expect Skubal to earn consideration for a three-peat.

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American League MVP Poll

1. Yordan Alvarez, Houston Astros (-145)

2026 Stats: .323 BA, 25 HR, 56 RBI, 55 R, .431 OBP, 1.070 OPS

It was hard to imagine Yordan Alvarez playing any better than he has this season, but he continues to rake in June. Alvarez is hitting .391 (4th) with the second-best OBP (.481), 27 hits (3rd), 17 RBI (T-8th), 16 runs scored (T-11th), and five home runs (T-18th).

At home, Alvarez is hitting .349 (6th) with 12 home runs (5th), and top five ranks in OBP, SLG, and OPS. He's on pace to shatter all his career-highs and be the frontrunner for MVP as long as he stays healthy.

2. Nick Kurtz, Athletics (+250)

2026 Stats: .290 BA, 19 HR, 61 RBI, 56 R, .439 OBP, .995 OPS

Nick Kurtz is eating this month. The second-year pro has nine homers and a .296 BA in June, to go along with a 1.156 OPS (4th) and top 10 marks in OBP (.438) and SLG (.718). He has 21 hits, 20 RBI, and 17 runs scored, plus 27 strikeouts and 18 walks.

No one is calling Kurtz a generational prospect or player, but what he's doing belongs in the history books. Kurtz is the third left-handed hitter since 1920 with 30+ home runs, 100+ RBI, and 100+ walks in his first 162 games — joining Juan Soto and Ted Williams.

3. Ben Rice, New York Yankees (+550)

2026 Stats: .288 BA, 22 HR, 53 RBI, 55 R, .607 SLG, .989 OPS

Ben Rice has four home runs on nine hits over his last eight games as he starts to heat up. Rice has the second-best SLG in the MLB (.607) and his 22 homers are fourth overall and third in the AL. Rice is doing his best Aaron Judge impression with the former MVP out on IL and even sports an impressive hard hit percentage of 47.4.

Defensively, Rice has a lot of room to grow with a -9 DRS and -4 OAA. That's where a player like Bobby Witt has an edge. Witt missed the last three games and is in danger of missing more with a knee injury. That has caused Witt's MVP odds to drop, but there is also no telling how this will affect him moving forward, so Ben Rice and Nick Kurtz move up for the time being.

Long Shot: Byron Buxton, Minnesota Twins (+2800)

2026 Stats: .275 BA, 25 HR, 41 RBI, 53 R, .596 SLG, .929 OPS

Byron Buxton is performing at a en elite clip this year and it's kind of going under the rug. Buxton hit a career-high 35 homers last season in 126 games and already has 25 (3rd-most) over 68 games. The 32-year-old ranks top 10 in runs scored (53), SLG (.596) and OPS (.929). Buxton's career-high for games played is 140 (2017) and he's only exceeded 100 games played three times. If he does 100-plus games this year, Buxton will break all his career-highs.

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National League MVP Poll

1. Shoehi Ohtani, Los Angeles Dodgers (-1600)

2026 Stats: .296 BA, 17 HR, 44 RBI, 54 R, .418 OBP, .976 OPS

Shohei Ohtani is in a little bit of slump on the mound with seven earned runs and 13 hits allowed over the last two starts. Ohtani did have a 0.74 ERA before his last two starts, which is now a 1.47. However, in his last 10 games, Ohtani has hit six home runs, seven RBI, nine runs scored, and nine walks. An injury is the only way he doesn't win his fifth MVP trophy.

2. Kyle Schwarber, Philadelphia Phillies (+3000)

2026 Stats: .252 BA, 29 HR, 52 RBI, 51 R, .594 SLG, .959 OPS

Kyle Schwarber was all of our social media feeds for a three-home run night against the Mets and he followed that up with another the following night. Schwarber hit two home runs in the same inning against the Mets that traveled a combined 913 feet. It was the same game that his teammate Bryce Harper became the 11th Phillies player to hit for the cycle.

Despite leading the MLB with 29 bombs this season, Schwarber would have to break the all-time record and then some to catch Ohtani for MVP consideration.

3. Jordan Walker, St. Louis Cardinals (+5000)

2026 Stats: .287 BA, 18 HR, 58 RBI, 46 R, 10 SB, .864 OPS

Jordan Walker is really taking off in his fourth year as a pro. The 24-year-old already has a career-high in home runs (18), RBI (58), stolen bases (10), and he's not even halfway through the season. Walker is becoming the face of the franchise and with the Cardinals positioned fairly comfortably in the NL Central, Walker is in a good spot to receive some third, fourth, and fifth-place votes for MVP this season with Juan Soto and James Wood.

Long Shot: James Wood, Washington Nationals (+5000)

2026 Stats: .273 BA, 20 HR, 49 RBI, 70 R, 13 SB, .401 OBP

The Nationals are 41-38 and James Wood still has the hot bat. Wood reached 20 home runs (T-6th), leads the MLB in runs scored (70), and ranks top 20 in WAR (3.4), RBI (49), steals (13), OBP (.401), SLG (.537), and OPS (.938). If he continues cranking in runs and scoring them, Wood can quitely finish top five in MVP voting.

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Astros vs. Blue Jays Game Discussion: 6/23/2026

HOUSTON, TX - JUNE 17: Peter Lambert #38 of the Houston Astros pitches during the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on Wednesday, June 17, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kairi Mano/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

TODAY’S GAME: The Astros and Blue Jays will play the 2nd game of this 3-game set this afternoon at Rogers Centre.

RHP Peter Lambert (6-4) will start for the Astros as he takes on Jays RHP Shane Bieber, who is making is 1st start of the season.

Today is Lambert’s 1st career start and 2nd app. vs. TOR (other app. was in relief at Rogers Centre-3.0 IP, 0 R, 4/12/24).

RIDING THE LAMBO: Today’s Astros starter RHP Peter Lambert will make his 12th start/app. of the season.

He has pitched well as of late, posting a 4-0 record in his last 5 starts with a 2.83 ERA (9ER/28.2IP).

In his most recent start on June 17 vs. DET, he allowed 1 run on just 2 hits in 7.0 innings of work to earn the win in a 4-2 Astros victory (0 BB, 5 SO).

Lambert’s 4 wins since May 24 are tied for tops in the Majors in that span.

Lambert pitched last year for the Tokyo Yakult Swallows in the NPB, posting a 3.98 ERA (55ER/124.1IP) with 111 strikeouts in 23 appearances in Japan.

He began this season at Triple A Sugar Land (1.84 ERA in three appearances) before being called up April 17.

ROAD TRIPPIN: Today is the 2nd game of a 7-game road trip for the Astros, during which they will visit TOR (3G) and DET (4G), respectively.

Road Success: The Astros are 10-7 in their last 3 road trips combined…they have have posted a 16-13 record on the road since going 1-9 on their 1st road trip of the 2026 season.

Road Raking: The Astros are T-1st in the AL in road batting avg. at .251…they also rank 2nd in road SLG (.414) and OPS (.740) and 3rd in road HR (52) and OBP (.325).

ASTROS-BLUE JAYS: The Astros were 4-2 vs. TOR in 2025 (3-0 at home, 1-2 at TOR).

HOU pitched very well vs. TOR last season, posting a 1.86 ERA (11ER/53.1IP) vs. them in 6 games while allowing just 31 hits in 53.1 IP for a .169 opponent batting avg.

Jays hitters were just 32×189 vs. HOU pitching overall last season.

Recent Success: Including last night’s game, the Astros have won 6 of 9 and 8 of their last 12 vs. TOR.

LAST NIGHT’S RECAP: The Astros were topped by the Blue Jays in last night’s series opener, 4-2.

RHP Hunter Brown started the game, but had no decision (3.0 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 2 BB, 4 SO).

Jeremy Pena (1×2, R), Isaac Paredes (1×3, RBI) and Jose Altuve (1×3, RBI) contributed offensively.

An RBI-single by Jose Altuve in the 6th inning tied the game at 2-2, before TOR added single runs in the 7th and 8th innings to pull ahead.

Astros hitters were limited to just 5 singles by Blue Jays hurlers.

CLOSE CALLS: The Astros are now 14-10 in two-run games and 8-4 in one-run games.

THE SLOW TURNAROUND: Over the last month (May 21-June 22), the Astros are 17-12 (.586), which is T-2nd-best in the AL in that span.

RECENT STROS: The Astros have won 4 of 6 and 6 of their last 10 games.

HISTORIC HOMERS: Per Elias, Yordan Alvarez’ 25 HR are tied for the 2nd-most in franchise history through the club’s 1st 80 games.

The record for HR through the club’s 1st 81 games is 27, set by Lance Berkman in 2002.


Most HR thru 80 Team Games
26 – J. Bagwell, 1994 & 1999
25 – Y. Alvarez, 2026
25 – L. Berkman, 2002


Most HR thru 81 Team Games
27 – L. Berkman, 2002
26 – J. Bagwell, 1994 & 1999

ALL-STAR VOTING: Yordan Alvarez leads all AL DH’s in All-Star voting, per MLB’s update yesterday.

His 1,974,459 votes rank 2nd in the AL and 3rd overall in the Majors.

ROCKIN AT ROGERS: In his last 15 games at Rogers Centre, Yordan Alvarez has 7 HR and 16 RBI and is hitting .370 (19×50) in that span with an .860 SLG and a 1.362 OPS.

PEN PALS: Since May 15, the Astros bullpen has the best ERA in the AL with a 2.82 clip (39R/124.2IP). The Astros are 20-15 since May 15.

OKERT’S 0’S: LHP Steven Okert has not allowed a run in his last 15.0 innings, which is the longest scoreless streak by an Astros hurler this season.

His streak, which spans 12 apps., is the longest cons. inning scoreless streak since RHP AJ Blubaugh recorded 22.1 cons. scoreless innings from Aug. 23, 2025-March 26, 2026.

In Okert’s current streak, which began on May 23 at CHC, he has allowed just 4 hits in those 15.0 innings pitched.

HADERADE: In his 8 appearances since coming of the IL on June 3, opponents are just 2×26 off LHP Josh Hader.

Hader has posted a 1.13 ERA (1ER/8IP) and is 5-for-5 in save opportunities (.077 opp. avg., .038 WHIP).

ON THE DEFENSIVE: The Astros have the best fielding pct. in the AL at .989 and are tied with the A’s for the fewest errors committed with 30.

1B Christian Walker has led the way, as he has not committed an error in his 77 games played at 1B.

Dating back to last season, Walker has not made an error in his last 99 games at 1B (last error was August 23 at BAL).

POSITIVE IMPACT: Since SS Jeremy Peña returned to the lineup on May 18, the Astros have gone 18-14, while Peña has hit .297 (35×118) with 5 doubles, 6 homers and 18 RBI in 32 games.

TAPPING FOR SUCCESS: Astros batters have won an MLB-best 55 ABS challenges and lead the Majors in challenge success rate (60%).

Isaac Paredes (9-for-9) has the most successful challenges in the Majors without losing one.

Jose Altuve has been successful on 14-of-19 challenges (74%), ranking 2nd in the Majors in successful challenges.

Game Info

Game Date/Time: Tuesday, June 23, 3:07 p.m. CT

Location: Rodgers Centre, Toronto, ON

TV: Space City Home Network

Radio: KBME 790 AM & 94.5 FM HD2; TUDN 102.9 FM HD2 (Spanish)

NBA Draft Preview: How to watch, start time, TV channel

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 22: Darryn Peterson talks with media during the 2026 NBA draft prospect availability at Lotte New York Palace on June 22, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Caleb Bowlin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s draft day in Brooklyn. The Utah Jazz, after beating the lottery odds, will make the most consequential draft pick franchise history.

Since May, rumors have circulated around Utah in every which way. Will the Jazz trade up for the first overall pick? Will they trade down to three? Maybe they’ll take Cameron Boozer over Darryn Peterson if both are on the board at second. Maybe they’ll swing for the likes of Jaylen Brown and get out of the draft completely.

Of course, behind each of these rumors is a front office trying to hide their hand and gain an advantage against the competitors. The consensus has BYU’s AJ Dybantsa going first overall to the Washington Wizards. Carlos Boozer (a scout for the Utah Jazz) beleives that teams will regret passing on his son. Darryn Peterson will have you beleive that he’s slated to hear his name first tonight:

Regardless of how the draft shakes out, Jazz fans can rest assured that they will get one of three extremely polished, talented, and promising young players in Dybantsa, Peterson, or Boozer. Each have the potential to change the trajectory of the franchise for the forseeable future. Each are worth getting excited for.

As a reminder, the NBA Draft will continue the two-day format again this year. Round one will take place today and air on both ABC and ESPN, while round two will take place tomorrow exclusivley on ESPN. In round one, each team will have five mintutes to make their selection. That slims down to four minutes per selection in round two.

How to watch:

When: June 23rd, 7:00 PM Mountain Time

Where: Barclays Center, Brooklyn, NY

Channel: ABC, ESPN

Who is Micah Nori? What should you know about Blazers new head coach

The Portland Trail Blazers were dealt a bad hand to start the 2025-26 NBA season, with their head coach, Chauncey Billups, indicted in October 2025 on federal wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy charges.

Still, despite having to change their coaching staff on the fly just one game into the season, the Blazers exceeded expectations, earning a spot in the Play-In Tournament and earning the Western Conference's No. 7 seed.

Their decision to not bring back head coach Tiago Splitter certainly had fans scratching their heads. But the Blazers have found a new sheriff in town, Micah Nori.

An assistant coach with the Minnesota Timberwolves for the last five seasons, Nori has been with five teams as an assistant over the last 17 seasons. Here's what to know about the new head coach in Portland.

Who is Micah Nori?

Widely regarded as one of the top assistants in the league, Nori possesses strong communication and relationship skills, reportedly beating out Boston Celtics assistant Tyler Lashbrook and former Blazers' interim coach Tiago Splitter for the job.

Involved in NBA coaching ranks since 2009, Nori has served as an assistant for the Toronto Raptors, Sacramento Kings, Detroit Pistons, Denver Nuggets, and Minnesota Timberwolves in his career.

Has Nori ever been a head coach?

Not during the regular season. However, during the Timberwolves' 2024 playoff run, Nori was forced to step up for parts of the postseason after head coach Chris Finch suffered a knee injury when Mike Conley collided with him on the sidelines.

Finch has gone out of his way to sing Nori's praises over the years.

"He is elite in what I call the small pieces of the game," Finch said per The Athletic. "Small not that they are unimportant, but small in that they are often overlooked. He’s elite with lineup combinations. Elite with rotations. Elite with special situations, whether it’s [after timeouts], end of game or just understanding how to maximize possessions."

Did Nori draw interest from other teams?

The Athletic reports that Nori also drew interest from the Dallas Mavericks and Chicago Bulls, though the Bulls job went to former Blazers' interim head coach Tiago Splitter.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY Sports: What to know about Micah Nori, Portland Trail Blazers' new head coach

Former Laker Julius Randle traded from perennial contender Timberwolves to rebuilding Nets

A basketball player holds the ball over his head while shooting a free throw.
Timberwolves forward Julius Randle shoots a free throw against the Detroit Pistons on March 28 in Minneapolis. (Bruce Kluckhohn / Associated Press)

Julius Randle is headed back to New York, although he will be playing in a different borough this time around.

The Brooklyn Nets acquired the 12-year veteran after he spent the past two seasons with the Minnesota Timberwolves, multiple media outlets reported Monday night.

As part of the three-team deal, Minnesota will send Randle and the 28th pick in Tuesday’s draft to Brooklyn in exchange for the Nets’ No. 33 overall pick. In addition, Brooklyn will send veteran center Nic Claxton to the Chicago Bulls. The Timberwolves will receive Mo Gueye from Chicago but are expected to waive the third-year forward.

Read more:Heat acquiring Giannis Antetokounmpo in blockbuster trade with Bucks

For Minnesota, the trade creates a $33 million trade exception as well as financial flexibility to seek free agents to play alongside superstar Anthony Edwards. Later on Monday, the Timberwolves came to terms with guard Ayo Dosunmu on a five-year, $112-million deal to remain with the team after being acquired from Chicago at the trade deadline.

Randle goes from a team that won 49 games in each of the last two seasons and three playoff series during that stretch to one that won just 20 games last year and a combined 78 over the past three seasons.

The Nets, who haven’t had a representative in the All-Star Game since Kevin Durant in 2022, will continue rebuilding with the No. 6 overall pick in the 2026 draft to go with the first-rounder they received from Minnesota.

Read more:Can the Lakers find a late first-round gem in this lauded NBA draft class?

The Lakers drafted Randle at No. 7 overall in 2014, with his first two NBA seasons coinciding with the final two of Lakers legend Kobe Bryant. After becoming a free agent in 2018, Randle played one season with the New Orleans Pelicans before becoming a three-time All-Star during five seasons with the New York Knicks.

In October 2024, Randle went to Minnesota as part of the deal that brought Karl-Anthony Towns to New York. Towns was a key member of the Knicks team that defeated the San Antonio Spurs in the NBA Finals and celebrated with a championship parade in Lower Manhattan last week.

During the 2025 postseason, Randle shook his reputation for fading in the playoffs, crediting his perseverance to a mentality instilled in him many years earlier by Bryant.

Read more:Finally a postseason force, Julius Randle credits Kobe Bryant for instilling 'Mamba Mentality'

“I had a great mentor in Kobe that didn’t necessarily let me pout or get down on myself,” Randle said after scoring a career playoff high of 31 points during a conference semifinal game against Golden State. “His thing was always, ‘All right, what’s next? How can you get better? How can you improve?’ So I always just kind of took that mentality with me.”

While Randle hasn’t publicly commented on the trade, his wife Kendra posted a video to her Instagram Story of 9-year-old son Kyden, the oldest of their three children, stating that he’s “so excited” and “so happy” to be returning to New York.

“@brooklynnets fans he really wanted to make this,” Kendra Randle wrote as a caption to the video.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Some real (and old) concerns about the 2026 Braves are starting to emerge

Jun 7, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves pitching coach Jeremy Hefner (85) talks to pitcher Bryce Elder (55) on the mound during the game against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the second inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Godfree-Imagn Images | Jordan Godfree-Imagn Images

Let’s start this off with some good news: If the Braves play straight-up mediocre .500 baseball from this point forward, they should still have enough wins to get them back into the Postseason. The fantastic level of form that they reached during late-March and throughout April and most of May has essentially ensured that the Braves have a nice little “nest-egg” of sorts to play with as far as their Postseason chances go.

PECOTA still has the Braves at a 74 percent chance of winning the NL East and a 98 percent chance of making the Postseason in some form. FanGraphs’ Playoff Odds also paints a rosy picture by giving them an 80 percent chance of winning the division and a 97 percent chance of making the Postseason. In the grand scheme of things, it’s fine. It may be “Blackheart” Lio Rush’s version of “fine” but it’s fine nonetheless.

With that being said, it’s hard not to feel a bit alarmed by what we’ve seen from the Braves since mid-May. There were concerns about the starting rotation heading into this season and while the rotation did a fantastic job early on in order to dispel most of those concerns, they’ve finally started to rear their ugly head and it’s been pretty concerning! Since May 18, Atlanta’s rotation has collectively produced an ERA of 5.20 (ERA- 125) and a FIP of 4.64 (113 FIP-). Both of those numbers are near the bottom of Major League Baseball and a lot of that has to do with the fact that outside of former White Sox hurlers Chris Sale and Martín Pérez, the rest of the rotation has been struggling mightily.

Grant Holmes looked better on Monday night but he still has trouble getting through two turns on the lineup on any given night, much less getting any deeper than that. Spencer Strider was pretty inconsistent while he was healthy and now he’s out for the foreseeable future and it doesn’t help that JR Ritchie has essentially been baptized by fire as Strider’s replacement. Bryce Elder’s magical ride has come to a screeching halt and his most recent start where he got blown up for eight runs in a single inning of six innings of work represented the clear nadir for both Elder and this rotation at the moment.

Sale (60 ERA-, 42 FIP-) and Pérez (81 ERA-, 80 FIP-) are the only regulars who have an ERA- and FIP- below the league average of 100 since May 18 — everybody else is far over. Grant Holmes is the “best” of the bunch with an ERA- of 116 and a FIP- of 158. As bad as Elder has been (169 ERA-, 121 FIP-), Strider was actually a little worse with an equivalent ERA- of 169 and a worse FIP- of 157. JR Ritchie has tried his best but so far that’s resulted in an ERA- of 240 and a FIP- of 187.

The bullpen has essentially been carrying the pitching staff since mid-May, as they are currently leading baseball in ERA- since May 18 (65) and are top-five in FIP- at 85. No matter who they’ve called upon in the bullpen (whether it’s been high-leverage guys like Raisel Iglesias, Robert Suarez or Dylan Lee or the rest of the relievers like Dylan Dodd, Reynaldo López, Tyler Kinley, Didier Fuentes and even Carlos Carrasco being called upon to eat innings), everybody’s known their role and gotten the job done while the rotation has largely struggled. Their performance has been one of the only things keeping this current downturn in form from being an actual mid-season collapse.

As a matter of fact, the bullpen may be the one thing holding this entire team together at the moment because the offense has absolutely cratered for about a month or so. From Opening Day until May 17, the Braves as a team hit .265/.328/.444 with a wOBA of .337 and a wRC+ of 113 with the team wRC+ being second in all of baseball only behind the Dodgers. Ever since May 18, however, things have changed drastically. Atlanta has been hitting .232/.296/.377 at the plate with a wOBA of .306 and a team wRC+ of 87. Ever since mid-May, Atlanta has essentially been rolling out the third-worst offense in all of baseball with only the Padres and the Guardians being worse.

Now, a lot of that probably has to do with the fact that Drake Baldwin was missing for quite some time during that span and also Ronald Acuña Jr. has also been sitting on the sidelines for long stretches as well. It also didn’t help that during that period when both Baldwin and Sean Murphy were gone, Atlanta actively decided to play throwback National League baseball where they were effectively using the catcher as the pitchers’ spot in the lineup.

Bless Sandy León and Austin Wynns for trying but León putting up a wRC+ of -84 in 37 plate appearances is truly astonishing and it was also painful to see Wynns add to that with a -73 wRC+ over 14 additional plate appearances. It’s clear with the addition of Joey Bart that the Braves have done a complete 180 in what they value in backup catchers since clearly León’s defense and experience behind the plate was not enough to overcome the overall black hole of plate production that he was delivering during his time out there.

Also, Ha-Seong Kim’s plate performance has been shocking and not in a good way. Any time where the Braves put out León and Kim at the same time, there were going to be two hitters in the lineup where it would’ve been a shock to see them get a hit. It’s something you just can’t have and it’s why the light-hitting Jorge Mateo has been getting plenty of opportunities and why Atlanta has also been desperate to keep Mauricio Dubón in the lineup no matter where he plays.

Things got to the point where Matt Olson played right field at the tail end of a game last week because of the domino effect of substitutions that resulted in Walt Weiss making sure that Kim didn’t have to take an at-bat while the field shuffling was going on. He’s got to get it going soon but it’s also one of those cases where it’s tough to keep giving him plate appearances while he’s this terrible at the plate.

Atlanta has been getting positive contributions from Michael Harris II, Ronald Acuña Jr. (when healthy), Matt Olson, Ozzie Albies and Mauricio Dubón but it’s clear that they can’t carry the team when there are multiple hitters carrying a negative wRC+. Austin Riley’s inability to get going has also been frustrating to observe as well. Guys like Mike Yastrzemski, Eli White, the aforementioned Mateo and Dominic Smith are trying their best but it’s also clear that they are in a position where they need to perform out of their shoes in order to keep the offense afloat on a nightly basis in recent times.

I’ve regularly had Alex Anthopoulos’s preseason opinion on this team running through my mind for most of this season. He was right when he said that if this team was going to bounce back, the offense would need to return to good form after spending the better part of two years wandering in the wilderness. We saw that play out with the scalding-hot start that this team got off to to begin the season. Now we’re seeing the offense’s fortunes coincide with the team’s fortunes and it’s frustrating to see.

With all of that being said, I do have real hope that Atlanta’s offense will get things together. While watching them struggle lately has been truly frustrating, it’s not a hopeless situation. On the other hand, the starting rotation needs help and they need it badly. Folks have been screaming about the need to add to this rotation since this past offseason and now it has become glaringly clear what needs to be addressed at the deadline. I’ve already stated my opinion on whether or not the Brave should go after Tarik Skubal if the opportunity presents itself but even if they don’t swing for the fences in that regard, it’s clear that Atlanta should be trying to figure out a way to improve this rotation between now and the deadline.

Whether that’s simply bringing up Hurston Waldrep or going after some arms from teams that are planning on selling at the deadline (and there will be a handful), if the Braves are going to be serious about confirming their Postseason spot and also hopefully doing some damage when they get there, the rotation has to be improved. The bullpen is carrying the load for the pitching staff and the lineup has shown that they can make it happen at the plate for a decently-long stretch. On paper, the rotation has been the weak spot for the longest time and now they’ve mostly come crashing back down to earth after spending the early portion of this season in glorious orbit.

It’s clear that the Braves aren’t going to simply walk away with the division now that the Phillies are showing some real signs of being serious in recent weeks. The Braves still have a fairly nice lead in the division and as long as they don’t truly collapse then the Postseason is well within their grasp. This is a resilient bunch so I’d imagine that they will fight through this rough patch and get back to something close to what we saw from them earlier this season.

Still, it’s becoming very clear that the team won’t be able to simply put it into cruise control down the stretch. There are some real concerns with this team at the moment and hopefully we’ll see them get addressed at some point soon. We’ll see what happens, though.